Mark Edward Snay v. Destiny Rose Vest ( 2011 )


Menu:
  • Order                                                                         Michigan Supreme Court
    Lansing, Michigan
    May 6, 2011                                                                        Robert P. Young, Jr.,
    Chief Justice
    142333                                                                              Michael F. Cavanagh
    Marilyn Kelly
    Stephen J. Markman
    Diane M. Hathaway
    Mary Beth Kelly
    MARK EDWARD SNAY,                                                                       Brian K. Zahra,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                                                                      Justices
    v                                                        SC: 142333
    COA: 293618
    Lapeer CC: 09-041541-DP
    DESTINY ROSE VEST,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    _________________________________________/
    On order of the Court, the application for leave to appeal the November 18, 2010
    judgment of the Court of Appeals is considered, and it is DENIED, because we are not
    persuaded that the questions presented should be reviewed by this Court.
    MARILYN KELLY, J. (concurring).
    I concur in the Court’s order denying plaintiff’s application for leave to appeal. I
    write separately because I strongly disagree with the overly rigid standing threshold in
    the Paternity Act.1 I urge the Legislature to reconsider the act and to confer standing on
    fathers who can definitively prove their paternity.
    BACKGROUND
    Defendant Destiny Vest was married to Harold Vest at the time of the conception
    and birth of the child who is the subject of this appeal. However, it is undisputed that
    plaintiff is the child’s biological father. Plaintiff filed a complaint seeking sole physical
    custody of the child and joint legal custody with defendant. Plaintiff alleged that it was
    in the best interests of the child that he have physical custody.
    The circuit court initially entered an ex parte order awarding joint legal custody to
    the parties and sole physical custody to plaintiff. However, after a hearing, the court
    1
    MCL 722.711 et seq.
    2
    granted defendant’s motion for summary disposition and dismissed the case, concluding
    that plaintiff lacked standing under the Paternity Act.
    Plaintiff appealed, and the Court of Appeals affirmed the decision. It agreed that
    plaintiff lacked standing to seek custody of the child, but urged this Court to “revisit this
    issue in the context of this case.”2 Plaintiff then sought leave to appeal in this Court.
    THE NEED FOR CHANGE
    Plaintiff argues that he has standing to seek custody because he has been
    determined to be the biological father of the child. I recognize that the Paternity Act does
    not confer standing on a father or putative father unless the child satisfies the statutory
    definition of “born out of wedlock.”3 I further recognize that the child in this case does
    not meet that definition because defendant was married to Harold Vest at the time of the
    conception and birth of the child. But I question the wisdom of refusing to allow a
    proven biological father standing to adjudicate his rights with respect to his child.
    In his dissent in Girard v Wagenmaker,4 then-Chief Justice CAVANAGH noted the
    grave policy concerns resulting from the standing requirements in the Paternity Act.
    Rather than paraphrase his thoughtful concerns regarding the act, I adopt his analysis as
    my own:
    This brings me to the policy concerns implicated by this case . . . .
    The Wagenmakers contend that it would be profoundly undesirable to
    permit a putative father legal standing to bring a paternity claim against the
    wishes of the mother and her husband, where the mother and husband
    maintain an intact marriage and choose to treat the child as their own. At
    first glance, there might appear to be substantial force to this argument,
    which relies not only on the principle of protecting the sanctity of the
    family, but on the emotional and psychological well-being of the child
    involved. It must be conceded that a case like this one raises a painful
    moral dilemma. For several reasons, however, I believe this broad policy
    argument must fail.
    2
    Snay v Vest, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals, issued November
    18, 2010 (Docket No. 293618), p 1 n 1.
    3
    MCL 722.711(a) defines “child born out of wedlock” as “a child begotten and born to a
    woman who was not married from the conception to the date of birth of the child, or a
    child that the court has determined to be a child born or conceived during a marriage but
    not the issue of that marriage.”
    4
    Girard v Wagenmaker, 
    437 Mich 231
     (1991).
    3
    First, and perhaps most important given the precept of judicial
    restraint, a substantive policy question like this should be left to the
    Legislature. As I have demonstrated above, the only reasonable reading of
    the language of the Paternity Act, as previously interpreted by this Court
    [in Syrkowski v Appleyard, 
    420 Mich 367
     (1985)], compels the conclusion
    that the Legislature has authorized a paternity action like that brought by
    Girard in this case. If, on the other hand, the statutory language does not
    permit this Court to avoid the moral and policy questions, I would conclude
    that the balance of interests weighs in favor of permitting Girard’s claim. It
    is more than a little hypocritical to contend, as do the Wagenmakers, that
    denying standing to Girard is consistent with “the law’s repugnance to
    adulterers.” The biological mother in this kind of situation is certainly no
    less an “adulterer” than the biological father. It is surely a bit late to talk of
    preserving the “sanctity” of the marital family by the time a situation like
    the one alleged in this case has arisen.
    There is still a more basic pragmatic issue. Denying putative fathers
    like Girard a legal forum in which to press their claims will not prevent
    such claims from being made, quite possibly at times and in a manner far
    less conducive to the psychological health and security of the child
    involved. The law, after all, cannot sweep reality under the rug. Instead of
    leaving such paternity disputes unresolved, to fester and rankle down
    through the years, would it not be more desirable to give the parties their
    day in court and settle the issue once and for all? If the concern is the
    possibility of malicious or unfounded lawsuits, appropriate sanctions
    already exist. Furthermore, the Wagenmakers’ concern that the mechanics
    of the paternity inquiry would intrude unacceptably into their intimate
    marital privacy is unfounded given the ease and reliability of modern
    scientific paternity testing on the basis of blood samples.
    ***
    It cannot be emphasized too strongly that upholding Girard’s
    standing to bring his paternity claim would not in any way endorse or
    prejudge his claim to provide support for the child, or his claim to custody
    or visitation rights. But to deny Girard standing to bring his claim at the
    very outset is inherently unjust. The fact that it might appear unlikely or
    improbable that a given putative father might ultimately succeed on the
    merits of his claim in no way justifies denying him his day in court to make
    that claim. I am unwilling to make the arbitrary assumption that no
    support, custody, or visitation claim by a putative father, regarding the child
    of a married woman, will ever have sufficient merit to justify recognizing
    4
    the standing of any such claimants. The merits of each case are most
    appropriately considered at the very court hearing which the putative father
    seeks. His minimal right to such a hearing—in elemental due process
    terms, “the opportunity to be heard ‘at a meaningful time and in a
    meaningful manner’”—is the only issue before this Court in this case.
    ***
    Taking the broadest view of the statutory scheme, it seems to me that
    there would be something oddly askew with a legal framework which
    recognized the standing of a husband seeking to disclaim paternity of his
    wife’s child, yet refused standing to a man seeking to claim paternity of
    such a child. There is a sadly negative cast to the entire law of paternity.
    The focus is almost always on the recalcitrant father, forced unwillingly
    into supporting a child he refuses to acknowledge. It is rarely on the out-
    of-wedlock father who willingly shoulders his paternal responsibilities and
    voluntarily seeks to establish a relationship with his child. This undertow
    of social assumptions has affected the constitutional case law of the United
    States Supreme Court, which has shown a solicitous concern for the due
    process rights of the unwilling father threatened with involuntary liability
    for child support, while turning a remarkably cold shoulder to the due
    process claims of willing fathers who wish to maintain a relationship with
    their children. This Court, however, need not and should not interpret
    Michigan’s Paternity Act in such a selective and negative manner.[5]
    Perpetuation of a rigid standing rule in the face of conclusive evidence of paternity
    does not always serve the interests of children, putative parents, or the State of Michigan.
    As this Court stated in Serafin v Serafin:
    “If the function of a court is to find the truth of a matter so that
    justice might be done, then a rule which absolutely excludes the best
    possible evidence of a matter in issue rather than allow it to be weighed by
    the trier of fact must necessarily lead to injustice. Further, when a court
    voluntarily blindfolds itself to what every citizen can see, the public must
    justifiably question the administration of law to just that extent.”[6]
    5
    Id. at 269-276 (citations and footnotes omitted).
    6
    Serafin v Serafin, 
    401 Mich 629
    , 635-636 (1977), quoting Davis v Davis, 
    507 SW2d 841
    , 847 (Tex Civ App, 1974), rev’d on other grounds, 
    521 SW2d 603
     (1975).
    5
    Given that the Court is bound by the definition of “born out of wedlock” in the
    Paternity Act, I concur in the Court’s order denying plaintiff’s application for leave to
    appeal. But I wish to point out the adverse policy consequences of the part of the
    Paternity Act involved here. It raises an unyielding barrier to fathers and putative fathers
    who seek to have their claims redressed by our courts. When a plaintiff, like Mr. Snay,
    has presented conclusive evidence of paternity, the legal system should not turn a blind
    eye to his claims.
    CAVANAGH, J. I would grant leave to appeal for the reasons stated in my dissent
    in Girard v Wagenmaker, 
    437 Mich 231
    , 253-278 (1991) (CAVANAGH, J., dissenting).
    HATHAWAY, J., would grant leave to appeal.
    I, Corbin R. Davis, Clerk of the Michigan Supreme Court, certify that the
    foregoing is a true and complete copy of the order entered at the direction of the Court.
    May 6, 2011                         _________________________________________
    p0503                                                                 Clerk