Court Opinion

ID: 4446888
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-10-15 20:03:48.370122+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:34:25.234995
License: Public Domain

2019 IL App (1st) 190875

                                                                                FIRST DIVISION
                                                                                 October 15, 2019

                                          No. 1-19-0875

IN THE INTEREST OF GRACE C.,              )     Appeal from the Circuit Court of
                                          )     Cook County
(The People of the State of Illinois,     )
       Plaintiff-Appellee,                )
                                          )     No. 17 JA 274
v.                                        )
                                          )
Levi C.,                                  )     Honorable Richard A. Stevens
       Defendant-Appellant).              )     Judge Presiding
______________________________________________________________________________

       PRESIDING JUSTICE GRIFFIN delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
       Justices Hyman and Pierce, concurred in the judgment and opinion.

                                            OPINION

¶1     Respondent Levi C. was arrested and pled guilty to a charge of domestic battery for

abusing his daughter Grace C. During the abuse and neglect proceedings, Grace C. informed the

court and her guardian ad litem that Levi C. might not be her biological father. A paternity test

was conducted and it was determined that Levi C. is not Grace C.’s biological father. The

guardian ad litem, on behalf of Grace C., petitioned the trial court to declare the non-existence of

a parental relationship between Levi C. and Grace C.

¶2     Levi C. moved to dismiss Grace C.’s petition on the basis that it was filed too late. The

Illinois Parentage Act of 2015 (750 ILCS 46/101 et seq. (West 2016)) stipulates that an action to

declare the non-existence of a parent-child relationship must be brought within 2 years of the

petitioner knowing the facts that give rise to the petition. 750 ILCS 46/205(b) (West 2016). Levi

C. argues that because Grace C. was told by him and by her mother that Levi C. might not be her
No. 19-0875

biological father more than two years earlier, Grace C.’s petition is barred as untimely. Like the

trial court, we reject Levi C.’s argument, and we affirm.

¶3                                     I. BACKGROUND

¶4     Grace C. was born July 3, 2005. Respondent Levi C. was named as Grace C.’s father on

her birth certificate. Levi C. signed the birth certificate as an acknowledgement of paternity.

When Grace C. was three months old, her mother left. Grace C. lived under the care and custody

of Levi C. her whole life after that point, while intermittently staying with her mother. Grace C.

and her mother have had a strained relationship, and her mother now lives in Montana. When

Grace C. was eight or nine years old, her mother told her that Levi C. was not her biological

father. Levi C. also once mentioned to Grace C. when she was 10 years old that he was not her

biological father.

¶5     On March 23, 2017, officers from the Chicago Police Department responded to a call at a

liquor store. Both Grace C. and Levi C. were present. Twelve-year-old Grace C. told the officers

that she had run away from home because Levi C. had struck her in the face earlier that day. She

told officers that Levi C. had punched her in the back the prior day, and that the day before that,

he had whipped her with a belt. The officer could see visible swelling on Grace C.’s face, and

they took Levi C. into custody. Levi C. pleaded guilty to domestic battery.

¶6     The State filed a petition for adjudication of wardship for Grace C. At the initial hearing

on the petition for an adjudication of wardship, a guardian ad litem was appointed for Grace C.,

but Grace C. was not present. Levi C. was, however, present and he informed the court that he

was Grace C.’s father. The trial court entered an order of paternity in favor of Levi C. The matter

proceeded through the Juvenile Court Act process to adjudication, disposition, and permanency

hearings. Levi C. denied abusing Grace C., but the court found that Levi C. had abused Grace C.

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Levi C. began participating in therapy with DCFS’s reunification services and the trial court set a

goal of returning Grace C. to home within 12 months.

¶7     Almost 10 months later, the parties appeared in court for another permanency hearing. At

the hearing, Grace C. informed the trial court judge and her guardian ad litem that Levi C. might

not be her biological father. Grace C. requested that the trial court order paternity testing. Grace

C. indicated that she did not want visitation with Levi C. and did not want to return home, but

instead wanted to be adopted by her foster mother. Levi C. objected to paternity testing. Over

Levi C.’s objection, the trial court ordered paternity testing.

¶8     A report from DNA Diagnostic Center was filed with the juvenile court indicating that

Levi C. was not the father. Through her guardian ad litem, Grace C. filed a petition to declare the

non-existence of a parent-child relationship and to disestablish Levi C.’s parentage. Levi C. filed

a motion to dismiss the petition, arguing that the petition was not timely.

¶9     The Illinois Parentage Act of 2015 (750 ILCS 46/101 et seq. (West 2016)) provides a

process that governs “proceedings to declare the non-existence of a parent-child relationship.”

750 ILCS 46/205 (West 2016). The Act provides that the proceedings must be brought within 2

years of when the petitioner knew or should have known about the facts that support the petition.

750 ILCS 46/205(b) (West 2016).

¶ 10   Levi C. argues that the guardian ad litem’s petition, brought on behalf of Grace C., is

untimely because Grace C. knew that Levi C. was not her father more than two years before

filing her petition. Levi C. points to Grace C.’s own testimony in which she averred that both her

mother and Levi C. had informed her that Levi C. was not her biological father by the time she

was 10 years old. Grace C. was 13 years old when the petition to declare the non-existence of a

parental relationship was filed on her behalf. The trial court denied Levi C.’s motion to dismiss

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the petition, and instead vacated its prior order of paternity. The trial court entered a finding of

non-paternity consistent with the results of the DNA test and disestablished Levi C. as Grace

C.’s legal parent. Levi C. appeals that judgment.

¶ 11                                            II. ANALYSIS

¶ 12    Levi C. appeals the trial court’s rejection of his motion to dismiss Grace C.’s petition to

declare the non-existence of a parent-child relationship. 1 He argues that Grace C.’s admissions

under oath that she was told by her mother and by Levi C. himself that he was not her biological

father more than two years before her petition was filed should have resulted in the dismissal of

her petition.

¶ 13    Levi C. brought his motion to dismiss Grace C.’s petition under section 2-619(a)(5) of

the Illinois Code of Civil Procedure (735 ILCS 5/2-619(a)(5) (West 2016)). A section 2-619

motion to dismiss admits the legal sufficiency of a pleading. 735 ILCS 5/2-619 (West 2016). The

purpose of a section 2-619 motion to dismiss is to dispose of issues of law and easily proved

issues of fact at the outset of the litigation. In re Estate of Gallagher, 383 Ill. App. 3d 901, 903

(2008). Although a section 2-619 motion to dismiss admits the legal sufficiency of a pleading, it

raises defects, defenses, or some other affirmative matter appearing on the face of the pleading or

established by external submissions, that defeat the plaintiff’s claim. Jones v. Brown-Marino,

2017 IL App (1st) 152852, ¶ 20.

¶ 14    An action to declare the non-existence of a parent-child relationship may be brought by

the child, the birth mother, or a person presumed to be a parent under the Act. 750 ILCS

46/205(a) (West 2016). However, such an action is barred if it is brought later than 2 years after

the petitioner knew or should have known of the relevant facts. 750 ILCS 46/205(b) (West

2016). The question presented in this appeal is, when it is the child bringing the action, whether
        1
            Levi C. did not file a reply brief in support of his appeal.

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No. 19-0875

the child’s petition is barred as untimely if the child knows or might know more than two years

before bringing the action that someone presumed to be her parent is not her biological parent.

We hold that the child is not barred from bringing a petition under such circumstances, so the

trial court correctly denied Levi C.’s motion to dismiss the petition as untimely.

¶ 15   In Illinois, a child does not have the legal capacity to sue. Severs v. Country Mutual

Insurance Co., 89 Ill. 2d 515, 520 (1982). In order for a child to pursue a legal proceeding in her

own name, the minor child must appear by a guardian, guardian ad litem, parent, next friend, or

custodian. Klak v. Skellion, 317 Ill. App. 3d 1092, 1095 (2000). This precept of a child lacking

capacity to sue applies to the Illinois Parentage Act, despite the Act providing that an action

“may be brought by the child.” Id. at 1095-96. The parties all agree that Grace C., on her own,

could not have brought a petition to disestablish Levi C. as her parent at the time she was

informed that he might not be her biological father.

¶ 16   Nonetheless, Levi C. argues that Grace C.’s knowledge of the possibility that he was not

her biological father more than two years before the petition was filed on her behalf makes the

petition untimely. However, it is not until the child has the legal capacity to bring the action, at

the very earliest, that the limitations period can run against the child. Limitations periods do not

run against children, let alone expire, while the children continue to operate under the legal

incapacity of their age. Ferguson v. McKenzie, 202 Ill. 2d 304, 312 (2001); Parks v. Kownacki,

193 Ill. 2d 164, 176 (2000); Eiseman v. Lerner, 64 Ill. App. 3d 185, 188 (1978). In other

contexts, we have observed that the Act at issue in this case, the Illinois Parentage Act, contains

“a two-year statute of limitations only when a child reaches the age of majority so that such

children have a reasonable opportunity to assert their rights.” Tersavich v. First National Bank &

Trust Co. of Rockford, 194 Ill. App. 3d 972, 980 (1991). An unrepresented child’s knowledge of

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a triggering event under the Act is irrelevant because the child cannot bring a petition under the

Act. See Klak, 317 Ill. App. 3d at 1096. The child’s knowledge is not actionable until the child

reaches the age of 18 or, at a minimum, becomes represented by a party entitled to initiate legal

proceedings on the child’s behalf.

¶ 17    Like in Klak, where we held that an unrepresented child is entitled to bring an action to

determine the existence of a parent-child relationship two years after reaching the age of 18

(Klak, 317 Ill. App. 3d at 1096), a child that becomes represented by a guardian ad litem has two

years from attaining capacity to sue to bring an action to determine the existence of a parent-

child relationship. Even though the petition is brought on the child’s behalf and the child might

fairly be said to be the petitioner, the child cannot truly become the “petitioner” until reaching

the age of majority or having a guardian ad litem appointed that can act on her behalf.

¶ 18    Under the statute, the time for filing the petition begins to run when the person bringing

the petition acquires the knowledge that is the basis for the petition. But the child cannot be the

person bringing the petition until a guardian is appointed. Knowledge, for purposes of the

statutory limitations period, has to be vested in someone that has the capacity to be the petitioner

in order for the limitations period to begin running. A child’s statutory right to declare her

parental relationships should not hinge on whether the child has someone to adequately represent

her interests at the time of learning the possible facts that might give rise to the action. See

Severs, 89 Ill. 2d at 520 (a child with a meritorious cause of action but incapable of initiating any

proceeding for its enforcement will not be left to the whim or mercy of some self-constituted

next friend to enforce its rights).

¶ 19    Levi C. would have us hold that then-nine-year-old Grace C. should have retained a

lawyer to disestablish him as a legal parent immediately when she was told that he might not be

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her biological father. And Levi C. would further have us hold that Grace C.’s failure to act on the

information that he might be not be her biological father when she was nine years old forever

bars her from raising the issue. That interpretation of the Act lacks any basis in reason.

¶ 20   The problems with Levi C.’s proposed interpretation of the Act are evident from his very

own argument. Levi C. admits that “a guardian ad litem was appointed for [Grace C.] three years

after [Grace C.] learned the relevant facts, and [Grace C.] thus had no realistic opportunity to file

a petition to disestablish Levi C.’s parentage.” (Emphasis added). Levi C. would have us hold

that the child is barred from bringing the action before the child even has, in his words, a realistic

opportunity to bring the action. The statute, and common sense, supports no such interpretation.

¶ 21   Moreover, Grace C. did not, in fact, know that Levi C. was not her father when she was

nine or ten years old. She did not even know Levi C. was not her father when she discussed the

matter with her guardian ad litem and the trial court judge. By the time Grace C. was 10 years

old, she was simply told that Levi was not her biological father by her mother, with whom she

had a difficult relationship, and by Levi C. himself. But the evidence does not demonstrate that

she had any way to actually know that Levi C. was, in fact, not her biological father.

¶ 22   During these proceedings, both Levi C. and Grace C.’s mother represented to the court

that Levi C. was Grace C.’s father. They attempted to establish Levi C.’s paternity in this very

action. Levi C. signed Grace C.’s birth certificate as her father, raised her as his daughter, and

acknowledged paternity several times. The evidence does not show that Grace C. could have

known with any level of certainty that Levi C. was not actually her father until the paternity test

from an uninterested source conveyed that information to her. Grace C. had simply been told that

Levi C. was not her father by sources that she may or may not have been able to rely upon; but at

the same time Levi C. had similarly claimed Grace C. as his daughter on several occasions.

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No. 19-0875

¶ 23    To illustrate Grace C.’s uncertainty about the issue, when she first raised the issue of Levi

C.’s questionable paternity, she told her guardian ad litem and the trial court judge that she was

“not for sure” whether Levi C. was her biological father. Grace C. continued, “Well, all the rest

of the people that I live with said that he was my real father, but one time he said that he wasn’t

my real father.” Grace C.’s level of uncertainty around the issue does not rise to the level of

“knew or should have known” the facts surrounding non-paternity to trigger the limitations

period under the statute, especially when we are examining the knowledge of a 9 or 10 year old

child. The record does not reveal that at any time Grace C. stated that she had any certain

knowledge that Levi C. was not her biological father. Levi C. failed to meet his burden of

establishing that Grace C. knew or should have known the relevant facts to demonstrate the non-

existence of a parent-child relationship such that she should be barred from bringing the petition

at the time that she brought it.

¶ 24    The guardian ad litem and the State both filed response briefs in this appeal in support of

Grace C.’s interests in declaring the non-existence of a parent-child relationship. However, the

guardian ad litem and the State differ slightly in their interpretations of the statute insofar as it

concerns the point at which the two-year period for bringing the petition began to run. The

guardian ad litem suggests that the statutory period began to run when Grace C. appeared in the

trial judge’s chambers and expressed that Levi C. might not be her biological father. The State

suggests that the statutory period began to run when the guardian ad litem was appointed to

represent Grace C.’s interests in this matter.

¶ 25    Under either standard suggested by the parties, the petition in this case was timely filed.

So this case does not demand that we choose one proposed interpretation or other. We want to

briefly discuss the conflict between the guardian ad litem and the State’s position even though a

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resolution of that conflict will be left for another day.

¶ 26    The State’s position may be antagonistic to some of the tenets of the law governing

minors and may have undesirable unintended consequences. But there is likewise a body of

support for the State’s position in the form of case law that suggests that the statute of limitations

should be deemed to begin running when the minor becomes represented by a guardian and,

therefore, the minor’s legal incapacity is removed.

¶ 27    The State suggests that the two-year period for bringing the petition to declare the non-

existence of a parent-child relationship started immediately when the guardian ad litem was

appointed (citing Simcox v. Simcox, 131 Ill. 2d 491, 499 (1989) (Ryan, J., specially concurring).

This is so, according to the State, because Grace C. was already possessed with the knowledge

that Levi C. might not be her father and, when the guardian was appointed, Grace C. had

someone willing and able to bring the petition on her behalf. The State points out that Levi C.’s

paternity was a necessary component of this case, so “it was incumbent upon [the guardian ad

litem] to investigate facts relevant to respondent-father’s paternity before litigating the issue of

paternity on Grace’s behalf.”

¶ 28    In this case, the State’s position makes perfect sense and can be applied without issue.

However, in a future similar case dealing with an abused minor, it is easy to see the issue of

biological paternity never being discussed between the guardian ad litem and the minor. Even if

the minor has some idea that her parent might not be a biological one, she very well might not

report that to the guardian ad litem right away. The State’s position suggests the imposition of a

duty on guardians ad litem to inquire into biological relationships between presumed parents and

children even when those guardians might have no apparent reason to question the biological

legitimacy of the parent-child relationship.

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No. 19-0875

¶ 29    The State’s position elevates a minor’s capacity to that of an adult at the moment a

guardian is appointed. The State’s interpretation causes no issues in this case, but Grace was 11

years old when the guardian ad litem was appointed to her and she was able to articulate her

questions about paternity to the trial judge and to her guardian ad litem. It may be very different,

however, if the minor is five years old when the guardian is appointed and is unable to articulate

such questions about biological paternity or maternity in the same manner, even if the child has

been told about the possibility of a legal parent being a non-biological one. Yet, under the State’s

interpretation of the Act’s limitations period, any issue about paternity would be barred in the

future for that five year old simply because a guardian ad litem was appointed, even though the

issue of paternity might only have been tangentially involved in the abuse and neglect

proceeding or whatever other proceeding necessitated the appointment of the guardian. If the

guardian did not have any reason to know or any reason to investigate whether biological

paternity was in question, the issue might very well not be raised and could produce harsh results

for the child.

¶ 30    On the other hand, our courts have indeed discussed the appointment of a guardian as an

event to trigger the statute of limitations. See, e.g., Kenney v. Indus. Commission, 93 Ill. 2d 516,

520 (1983) (“the limitations of time provided by the [Workers’ Compensation] Act did not run

against a minor so long as he was without a guardian.”); Simcox, 131 Ill. 2d at 499 (Ryan, J.,

specially concurring); and see generally Michele Meyer McCarthy, Effect of Appointment of

Legal Representative for Minor on Running of State Statute of Limitations Against Minor, 1
A.L.R. 6th 407 (Originally published in 2005).

¶ 31    We adopt neither proposal in this case because this appeal does not require us to resolve

the issue. We simply note that both positions enjoy some legal support, but that courts and

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litigants should be aware of the prospective pitfalls of those positions as well.

¶ 32   Nevertheless, the petition to declare the non-existence of a parent-child relationship in

this case was clearly not time barred, so we affirm.

¶ 33                                   III. CONCLUSION

¶ 34   Affirmed.

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