Est. of P.A. Sents, II v. Dellinger, K. ( 2022 )


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  • J-A19012-22
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    ESTATE OF PAUL ANTHONY SENTS,              :      IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    II, STACIE A. SENTS, PAUL A. SENTS         :           PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    Appellants              :
    :
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :      No. 496 MDA 2022
    KIRSTIN DELLINGER                          :
    Appeal from the Order Entered February 24, 2022
    In the Court of Common Pleas of York County Civil Division at No(s):
    2020-FC-000925-23
    BEFORE:      BOWES, J., KING, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*
    MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                        FILED: OCTOBER 18, 2022
    The estate of Paul Anthony Sents, II (“Estate”), appeals from the
    February 24, 2022 order dismissing with prejudice the Estate’s complaint to
    disestablish    the   acknowledged        paternity   of   Paul   Anthony   Sents,   II
    (“Decedent”) and obtain paternity testing to establish the paternity of two-
    year-old A.S. After review, we affirm.
    A.S. was born to Kirstin Dellinger (“Mother”) in December 2019. At the
    time of A.S.’s birth, Mother had been in a relationship with Decedent since
    early April 2019. N.T., 1/21/22, at 6, 109-10. Decedent and Mother were not
    married.    Shortly after A.S.’s birth, Decedent, with the consent of Mother,
    signed an acknowledgement of paternity pursuant to 23 Pa.C.S. § 5103(a),
    ____________________________________________
    *   Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-A19012-22
    and he never challenged the acknowledgement. Decedent committed suicide
    in May 2020, when A.S. was five months old.
    On January 19, 2021, the Estate filed a complaint against Mother and
    Dustin Sweitzer, Mother’s former paramour.        In the complaint, the Estate
    alleged that Decedent signed the acknowledgment of paternity solely based
    upon Mother’s fraudulent misrepresentation that he was the father of A.S.
    The Estate averred that Decedent’s parents, Stacie A. Sents (“Stacie”) and
    Paul A. Sents (“Paul”), submitted themselves and A.S. to private genetic
    testing, which established that Stacie and Paul were not genetically related to
    A.S.1    The Estate sought to void the acknowledgment of paternity and
    requested paternity testing of Sweitzer for the purpose of establishing his
    paternity of A.S.     This complaint is the only legal action concerning A.S.’s
    paternity.
    ____________________________________________
    1   To the extent the relief sought by the Estate was a court order regarding
    A.S.’s paternity and not damages against Mother or Sweitzer, the Estate’s
    filing of a complaint against Mother and Sweitzer as opposed to a petition
    regarding A.S. is procedurally questionable. We also note that counsel for the
    Estate uses the terms “complaint” and “petition” interchangeably.
    Nevertheless, the certified record does not reveal whether Mother or Sweitzer
    raised this inconsistency in the trial court, and we do not address it sua sponte.
    For the sake of uniformity, we refer to the pleading as a complaint.
    Similarly, the certified record does not indicate whether Stacie and/or Paul
    are executors of the Estate. However, because Mother challenged neither the
    identity of the party or parties instituting this action, nor the standing of the
    Estate, Stacie, or Paul, we likewise do not address these issues. See In re
    Estate of Brown, 
    30 A.3d 1200
    , 1205 (Pa.Super. 2011) (noting this Court
    cannot raise a standing issue sua sponte and a party who does not object to
    standing at the earliest opportunity waives any such challenge).
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    On February 3, 2021, Mother filed an answer to the complaint. Sweitzer
    did not file a responsive pleading.    Instead, he obtained private paternity
    testing with Mother’s consent.    Based upon the private paternity test, the
    parties agreed that Sweitzer was not A.S.’s father. N.T., 1/21/22, at 28-29.
    By April 12, 2021 order, the trial court dismissed Sweitzer from the action by
    agreement of the parties.
    The trial court conducted hearings on the matter on January 21, 2022,
    and February 22, 2022. At the hearings, Stacie, Paul, and Decedent’s sister
    testified on behalf of the Estate. The Estate also called Mother as if she were
    on cross-examination and Sweitzer as a rebuttal witness to Mother’s
    testimony. Mother also testified on her own behalf.
    Notably, during the hearing the Estate attempted to introduce the
    results of the private DNA testing obtained of Stacie and Paul purportedly
    showing that Stacie and Paul had no genetic connection to A.S. N.T., 1/21/22,
    at 106. The exhibits in question were reports of DNA test results from Genex
    Diagnostics, a company in Canada. See Estate Exhibit 1 and 2. One report,
    dated July 22, 2020, purported to analyze the relationship between A.S. and
    Paul. The second report, dated August 13, 2020, purported to analyze the
    relationship between A.S. on one hand, and Paul and Stacie on the other, to
    determine the likelihood that Decedent was A.S.’s father. Both test reports
    contained, on their face, disclaimers by Genex Diagnostics about the
    limitations of the test or its accuracy. Such limitations included the unverified
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    assumption that Stacie and Paul were genetically related to Decedent, and
    Stacie and Paul’s failure to submit to the laboratory’s identification protocols
    and laboratory-selected collection facility. The reports noted that the results
    were intended only for personal knowledge and not to establish legal identity
    or familial relations.
    Mother objected to the admission of the reports and any testimony that
    the results of the reports were valid. N.T., 1/21/22, at 11, 106. Mother’s
    objection was based upon the Estate’s failure to present testimony of a records
    custodian from the testing company to establish the testing procedure, chain
    of command, and other reliability or accuracy issues. See 
    id.
     The trial court
    took the issue under advisement based on its concern that the Estate laid no
    foundation for how the testing company arrived at its conclusion that Stacie
    and Paul were not related to A.S. and the lack of expert testimony to support
    this conclusion.2     Id. at 106-08.           At the second hearing, the trial court
    sustained Mother’s objection and ruled the tests were inadmissible without
    testimony from an appropriate Genex employee concerning the methodology
    of the testing. N.T., 2/22/22, at 28-29.
    ____________________________________________
    2  The trial court noted it found the testimony of Decedent’s sister to be
    credible that she helped Stacie and Paul administer the tests, followed the
    testing company’s instructions, and mailed the results directly to the testing
    company. N.T., 1/21/22, at 106-08. It also stated it would disregard that
    Stacie and Paul twice obtained a DNA sample from A.S. and instructed the
    testing company to analyze it without Mother’s knowledge or consent, as that
    was not the issue before the court. Id.
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    Also at the hearings, Stacie recalled that Decedent and Mother
    announced the pregnancy several weeks after they started dating by
    presenting her with a box containing a onesie and announcing that she and
    Paul were going to be grandparents. N.T., 1/21/22, at 41-42. Stacie and Paul
    both testified they were suspicious from the outset that Decedent was the
    father of Mother’s baby based upon how early in the relationship Mother
    became pregnant, as well as Decedent’s questioning his paternity prior to
    A.S.’s birth when he found “panties” under the seat of Mother’s car. Id. at
    41-42, 45-46, 76.      Despite their misgivings, Stacie and Paul accepted
    Decedent’s declaration that he was the father and treated A.S. as their
    grandson. Id. at 40, 69, 83.
    After Decedent died, his sister arranged for the genetic testing. Once
    the family obtained the results, Stacie terminated all contact with A.S.,
    ostensibly to avoid causing the child emotional distress when he got older.
    Id. at 47. Stacie and Paul believed Mother took advantage of Decedent’s poor
    mental health and desire for a family to convince him to sign the
    acknowledgement of paternity. Id. at 57-59, 80-83. They also insinuated
    that Mother had a financial motive, noting that Decedent changed the
    beneficiary of his military life insurance policy from Stacie to Mother after A.S.
    was born and that Mother currently receives Decedent’s social security death
    benefits on A.S.’s behalf. Id. at 61-65.
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    During   Mother’s     testimony,   she   recounted   her    and   Decedent’s
    excitement when they learned she was pregnant early in their relationship
    together. N.T., 1/21/22, at 6, 10, 24, 37; N.T., 2/22/22, at 112. She tracked
    her periods and believed Decedent was the father based upon the timing.
    N.T., 1/21/22, at 9, 23. She acknowledged having some initial reservations
    about whether Sweitzer could be the father, but believed he was not because
    of the timing of her last intercourse with Sweitzer.       Id. at 8-9.    Mother
    asserted her relationship with Sweitzer ended approximately one month
    before she began a relationship with Decedent. Id. at 15.
    Early in her pregnancy, Sweitzer questioned whether he was the father,
    which caused some friction between her and Decedent.            Id. at 21-29, 37.
    According to Mother, however, any doubt was put to rest by her doctor’s
    estimation of her conception date in mid-April 2019, which aligned with her
    tracking of her ovulation and timing of sexual relations with Decedent. Id. at
    8-9. From Mother’s perspective, Decedent accepted her doctor’s estimation
    and agreed he was the father. Id. at 21, 25-26. Decedent attended all of
    Mother’s pre-natal appointments. Id. at 114. She and Decedent moved in
    together in September 2019 in preparation for the baby’s arrival. Id. at 17.
    Decedent and Stacie were present in the delivery room when Mother delivered
    A.S. at 36 weeks gestation due to preeclampsia. Id. at 9, 114. Decedent
    signed the acknowledgement of paternity a few days later, declining paternity
    testing. Id. at 14, 115.
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    Mother and Decedent ended their relationship around the end of March
    2020, or the beginning of April 2020, when A.S. was four or five months old.
    Id. at 16.   Mother was aware prior to A.S.’s birth that Decedent’s mental
    health troubled him at times, but she observed Decedent’s mental health
    spiral downwards a few months after A.S.’s birth. Id. at 20. Around that
    time, the military discharged Decedent, he lost his job, his ex-girlfriend was
    pressing charges against him, and A.S. cried a lot from colic. Id. at 117.
    Decedent experienced a mental health episode and was violent towards
    Mother.   Id. at 120.   Mother called Stacie and Paul for help.     After this,
    Decedent was hospitalized for a week in April 2020 and moved in with Stacie
    and Paul upon his discharge. Id. at 17. Child protective services became
    involved and instructed Mother to wait for Decedent’s new medication to take
    effect before he saw A.S. Id. at 18. During that time, Mother and A.S. saw
    Decedent virtually. Id. at 17-19. In May 2020, Decedent resumed seeing
    A.S. at Stacie and Paul’s house until Decedent’s death at the end of the month.
    Id. Following Decedent’s death, A.S. continued to spend weekends at Stacie
    and Paul’s house while Mother worked her nursing shifts until Stacie and Paul
    suddenly ceased contact. Id. at 31-32.
    Mother was upset that Stacie and Paul tested A.S. without her
    knowledge or consent and believes Stacie and Paul’s decision to cease contact
    with A.S. in August 2020 was in contravention to Decedent’s wishes. Upon
    learning of Stacie and Paul’s test results, Mother “thought that they did
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    something to alter the tests, that it was not either done correctly or something
    went wrong[.]” Id. at 11-13. She does not wish A.S. to have any further
    testing. Id. Mother agreed to Sweitzer’s paternity testing after receiving the
    complaint because she believed it was inevitable the court would order his
    testing.   Id. at 8.   She was not surprised to learn that testing ruled out
    Sweitzer as A.S.’s father because she still believes Decedent was A.S.’s father
    based on the conception date. N.T., 2/22/22, at 10. Mother testified multiple
    times during the hearing that only Sweitzer or Decedent could be the father
    because she did not have intercourse with anyone else during the requisite
    timeframe. N.T., 1/21/22, at 32, 36; N.T., 2/22/22, at 6, 7, 10.
    Mother acknowledged she told Decedent she was sure he was the father,
    particularly after her doctor provided her with a better idea of dating her
    pregnancy. N.T., 1/21/22, at 20; see also Estate Exhibit 7 (text exchange
    between Mother and Decedent dated May 4, 2019, wherein Mother and
    Decedent agree she is pregnant with his baby); see also Estate Exhibit 4 (text
    exchange between Mother and Decedent dated May 14, 2019, wherein Mother
    expressed her reluctance to emotionally invest in their relationship 100% until
    her doctor’s appointment but assuring him it was his or Sweitzer’s baby).
    By order entered February 24, 2022, the trial court dismissed the
    Estate’s complaint, ruling that the Estate did not carry its burden of proving
    fraud, duress, or material mistake of fact by clear and convincing evidence.
    Order, 2/24/22, at 4. The court noted Mother’s testimony that only Decedent
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    could be the father, the agreement by the parties that Sweitzer was not the
    father based upon his private DNA test, and the inadmissibility of the genetic
    test results obtained by Stacie and Paul. Id. at 4-5. The court found that
    while the Estate “certainly raised matters which create suspicion,” it did not
    carry its burden of proof to permit the court to set aside Decedent’s
    acknowledgment of paternity. Id. at 5.
    The Estate timely filed a notice of appeal and a concise statement of
    errors complained of on appeal. The trial court issued an Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a)
    opinion on April 13, 2022.
    On appeal, the Estate presents the following issues for review.
    1.    The [t]rial [c]ourt committed an abuse of discretion and
    erred as a matter of law by failing to consider the credible
    testimony of [Stacie and Paul] regarding the DNA testing
    results of two separate testing kits which suggested no
    familial relationship between themselves and [A.S.].
    2.    The [t]rial [c]ourt committed an abuse of discretion and
    erred as a matter of law by not permitting properly
    introduced text message exhibits of [Decedent], which were
    in text conversations directly with Mother, regarding his
    state of mind, concerns regarding the conception date of the
    minor child, Mother’s misrepresentations regarding other
    sexual partners during the possible time of conception, . . .
    which supported [the testimony of Stacie and Paul] and the
    contents of [the Estate’s complaint] regarding Mother’s
    fraudulent actions.
    3.    The [t]rial [c]ourt committed an abuse of discretion and
    erred as a matter of law by failing to consider the well-
    established public policy which suggests that children should
    be secure in knowing who their parents are.
    4.    The [t]rial [c]ourt committed an abuse of discretion and
    erred as a matter of law by failing to consider the public
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    policy and the Commonwealth’s interest regarding the duty
    of parents to support their children, both financially and
    emotionally.
    Estate’s brief at 9-10.
    The crux of the Estate’s argument is that Decedent’s acknowledgement
    of paternity is invalid based upon fraud by Mother. See id. at 24-31. The
    Estate contends that it proved Mother fraudulently induced Decedent to
    acknowledge paternity by insisting he was the father and failing to inform him
    that she had a third sex partner who possibly could be the father. Id.
    We review orders in paternity matters for an abuse of discretion. S.N.M.
    v. M.F., 
    175 A.3d 333
    , 335 n.3 (Pa.Super. 2017).
    An abuse of discretion exists if the trial court has overridden or
    misapplied the law, or if there is insufficient evidence to sustain
    the order. Moreover, resolution of factual issues is for the trial
    court, and a reviewing court will not disturb the trial court's
    findings if they are supported by competent evidence. It is not
    enough [for reversal] that we, if sitting as a trial court, may have
    made a different finding.
    Vargo v. Schwartz, 
    940 A.2d 459
    , 462 (Pa.Super. 2007) (citations omitted).
    “The finder of fact is entitled to weigh the evidence presented and assess its
    credibility.” 
    Id.
     In so doing, the finder of fact “is free to believe all, part, or
    none of the evidence and [we as an appellate court] will not disturb the
    credibility determinations of the court below.” 
    Id.
    The relevant portion of the statute governing acknowledgments of
    paternity provides as follows.
    (a) Acknowledgment of paternity.-- The father of a child born to
    an unmarried woman may file with the Department of Public
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    Welfare, on forms prescribed by the department, an
    acknowledgment of paternity of the child which shall include the
    consent of the mother of the child, supported by her witnessed
    statement subject to 18 Pa.C.S. § 4904 (relating to unsworn
    falsification to authorities). In such case, the father shall have all
    the rights and duties as to the child which he would have had if
    he had been married to the mother at the time of the birth of the
    child, and the child shall have all the rights and duties as to the
    father which the child would have had if the father had been
    married to the mother at the time of birth. . . .
    ....
    (g) Rescission.—
    (1) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a
    signed, voluntary, witnessed acknowledgment of
    paternity subject to 18 Pa.C.S. § 4904 shall be
    considered a legal finding of paternity, subject to the
    right of any signatory to rescind the acknowledgment
    within the earlier of the following:
    (i) sixty days; or
    (ii) the date of an administrative or judicial
    proceeding relating to the child, including, but
    not limited to, a domestic relations section
    conference or a proceeding to establish a
    support order in which the signatory is a party.
    (2) After the expiration of the 60 days, an
    acknowledgment of paternity may be challenged in
    court only on the basis of fraud, duress or material
    mistake of fact, which must be established by the
    challenger through clear and convincing evidence. An
    order for support shall not be suspended during the
    period of challenge except for good cause shown.
    ....
    23 Pa.C.S. § 5103(a), (g) (internal footnote omitted).
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    By using the term “challenger” in § 5103(g), the Legislature intended to
    permit non-signatories to challenge the acknowledgment based upon fraud,
    duress, or material mistake of fact.       R.W.E. v. A.B.K., 
    961 A.2d 161
    (Pa.Super. 2008) (en banc). This Court explained the law regarding fraud in
    this context as follows.
    In B.O. v. C.O., [
    590 A.2d 313
     (Pa.Super. 1991)], this Court
    stated that “when an allegation of fraud is injected in an
    acknowledgment of paternity case, the whole tone and tenor of
    the matter changes. It opens the door to overturning settled
    issues and policies of the law.” B.O., [supra,] at 315. This Court
    went on to create a narrow fraud exception for challenging
    paternity, which is otherwise a settled issue based on the signed
    acknowledgment. We adopted the traditional elements of fraud
    established in Pennsylvania jurisprudence:
    (1) a misrepresentation, (2) a fraudulent utterance
    thereof, (3) an intention by the maker that the
    recipient will thereby be induced to act, (4) justifiable
    reliance by the recipient upon the misrepresentation,
    and (5) damage to the recipient as the proximate
    result.
    Id.
    Recent cases have moved away from this rigid five-prong
    test which this Court acknowledged in B.O. as problematic and
    somewhat circular. [Id.] Our recent decision of Glover v.
    Severino, 
    946 A.2d 710
     (Pa.Super. 2008), provides additional
    guidance as to the elements of fraud in the context of challenges
    to acknowledgments of paternity:
    A misrepresentation need not be an actual statement;
    it can be manifest in the form of silence or failure to
    disclose relevant information when good faith requires
    disclosure. Fraud is practiced when deception of
    another to his damage is brought about by a
    misrepresentation of fact or by silence when good
    faith required expression.          Fraud comprises
    anything calculated to deceive, whether by single act
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    or combination, or by suppression of truth, or
    suggestion of what is false, whether by direct
    falsehood or innuendo, by speech or silence, word of
    mouth, or look or gesture.
    
    Id.
     (quotations and citations omitted) (emphasis in original).
    In Glover, a mother had a brief sexual relationship with a
    putative father and became pregnant. Despite knowing that she
    had other sexual partners at the time of conception, the putative
    father signed an acknowledgment of paternity and paid child
    support, though his involvement in the child’s life was minimal and
    sporadic. Mother insisted that putative father was the father of
    the child, despite the results of later testing that revealed he was
    not. This Court held that despite the mother’s strong belief as to
    the identity of the biological father, her silence on the issue of
    other possible fathers and her failure to be forthcoming about the
    true probabilities of paternity constituted fraud by omission.
    R.W.E., supra, at 168.
    In the instant case, to prove Mother engaged in fraud, the Estate relies
    upon the Genex genetic testing results which purport to rule out Decedent as
    the father based upon the lack of genetic relationship between A.S., Stacie,
    and Paul.   Estate’s brief at 24-31.    It also points to Mother’s supposed
    admission at trial and in text messages with Decedent that she had sexual
    relations with someone besides Decedent and Sweitzer during the timeframe
    in question. Id.
    The problem with the Estate’s reliance upon the Genex test results is
    that it failed to secure their admission at the hearing. The Estate likens this
    case to Glover, a child support case in which the legal father proved fraud by
    omission with paternity test results excluding him from biological parentage,
    thereby rendering false the mother’s denials of intercourse with anyone else.
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    See the Estate’s brief at 29 (citing Glover, 
    supra).
             Yet, in Glover, the
    challenger obtained pre-hearing paternity testing through the court, a
    procedure provided for by a statute not applicable here. See Glover, 
    supra, at 712
    ; see also 23 Pa.C.S. § 4343(c).
    Critically, the Estate does not challenge the trial court’s evidentiary
    ruling regarding the paternity test results. In fact, it concedes that the genetic
    testing results were inadmissible without testimony from the testing facility.
    See Estate’s brief at 25. Nevertheless, the Estate contends the trial court
    should have relied on those inadmissible results to prove fraud by Mother
    because Stacie and Paul would not have cut off relations with A.S. if they did
    not think the results were reliable. Id. at 19-20, 30-31. Phrased differently,
    the Estate posits that because Stacie and Paul trust the validity and accuracy
    of the self-administered test kits, the trial court should have as well. Similarly,
    the Estate attempts to circumvent the evidentiary barrier by arguing that
    because Mother acknowledged the existence of the test results, it is irrelevant
    that she disputes the testing methodology or underlying science. Id. at 28.
    None of these arguments transforms the inadmissible test results into
    competent admissible evidence. Indeed, the Estate made zero effort during
    the hearing to authenticate the reports, establish an exception to the hearsay
    rule such as the business record exception, or offer expert testimony about
    the results, which were clearly based on scientific, technical, or other
    specialized knowledge.      Mother’s mere awareness that Stacie and Paul
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    possessed a report that purported to exclude a genetic relationship between
    them and A.S. is not tantamount to conceding the validity of them. In fact,
    the trial court made this precise ruling during the proceeding and the Estate
    insisted that it was not asking Mother to confirm the validity of the results.
    N.T., 1/21/22, at 11-12. Nevertheless, it revives this assertion on appeal in
    support of its contention that the test results are not only valid, but also
    constitutes clear and convincing evidence that Mother perpetrated a fraud.
    These efforts are futile.
    Next, the Estate attempts to prove Mother’s fraud by offering evidence
    of her supposed admission of sexual intercourse with someone other than
    Sweitzer or Decedent during the period of conception. See Estate’s brief at
    26-27. However, the certified record does not include the proposed facts. As
    noted above, Mother repeatedly testified that her only sex partners in March
    and April 2019 were Sweitzer and Decedent. Cf. N.C. v. M.H., 
    923 A.2d 499
    (Pa.Super. 2007) (finding fraud by omission despite exclusion of private
    paternity testing because the mother admitted during the hearing that she
    had unprotected intercourse with another man at the time of the child’s
    conception). Indeed, there is no testimony about an undisclosed third liaison
    during the relevant period.
    The Estate highlights a series of text messages between Mother and
    Decedent on June 14, 2019, regarding Decedent’s accusation that she
    previously lied to him about not having any sexual partners besides him and
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    Sweitzer. See Estate’s brief at 26. The trial court sustained Mother’s hearsay
    objection and ruled the Decedent’s accusation was admissible only as context
    for Mother’s responses. N.T., 2/22/22, at 4-5. Contrary to the Estate’s claim
    that Mother admitted in these messages to having intercourse with someone
    else during the period of conception, Mother’s texts are ambiguous. Rather
    than admit to additional partners, she reminded Decedent that any of her prior
    escapades that occurred one month before their relationship was none of his
    concern.   See Estate Exhibit 5 (“I don’t need to tell you who about my past
    or who I slept with before you . . . It was still almost a month between you
    and anyone else”). Moreover, counsel’s cross-examination of Mother about
    these messages bore little fruit as Mother continued to insist that she only had
    intercourse with Sweitzer and Decedent and that her texts responding to
    Father’s accusations related to Sweitzer. See, e.g., N.T., 2/22/22, at 5-6.
    Although the Estate insists that Mother’s testimony was not credible, that
    determination is left to the trial court, who made a credibility determination
    in Mother’s favor. Vargo, supra, at 462.
    Overall, absent the inadmissible genetic test results, the sum of
    evidence before the trial court was limited to (1) Mother’s steadfast insistence
    that Decedent and Sweitzer were her only sex partners during the timeframe
    in question; and (2) the stipulated exclusion of Sweitzer as the father. Beyond
    that, the trial court rejected the Estate’s witnesses who conveyed their
    personal suspicions that Decedent was not the father, that Mother had
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    additional partners, and that Mother fraudulently withheld this information
    from Decedent. In light of the foregoing discussion of the certified record, the
    trial court accurately characterized the Estate’s evidence of fraud as
    “conjecture at best.” Trial Court Opinion, 4/13/22, at 2. Thus, we discern no
    abuse of discretion in the trial court’s conclusion that the Estate did not prove
    fraud by clear and convincing evidence that would warrant voiding the
    acknowledgement of paternity pursuant to § 5103(g)(2).
    Next, we address the Estate’s collection of arguments that appeal to
    public policy. See Estate’s brief at 32-34. First, the assertion that Mother
    committed fraud simply to obtain Decedent’s death benefits is wholly
    unsupported by the certified record. Further, despite the Estate’s contentions
    to the contrary, the statute governing the acknowledgement of paternity
    provides no basis to order genetic testing for general, altruistic reasons. See
    S.N.M. v. M.F., 
    175 A.3d 333
    , 338 (Pa.Super. 2017) (holding trial court erred
    by ordering paternity testing to reveal child’s true paternity for the purpose of
    providing child with information for any future medical issues). In this vein,
    the Estate does not even attempt to identify an individual whom the trial court
    should order to be tested for these benevolent purposes.
    Finally, we reject the claim that the Estate is simply attempting to serve
    A.S.’s best interest in knowing his family.    In the view of the Estate, A.S.
    should be spared the trauma of believing that his father killed himself and his
    paternal family abandoned him when Decedent was not in fact his father.
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    J-A19012-22
    While we are sympathetic to this argument, without clear and convincing
    evidence of fraud, Decedent’s acknowledgment of paternity still stands. See
    S.N.M., supra at 338 (holding absent proof of fraud, even if appellant was
    not child’s biological father, he remained the child’s legal father based upon
    his acknowledgment of paternity). Thus, contrary to the protestations of the
    Estate, as a matter of law, Decedent was A.S.’s father.
    There is no doubt that paternity cases invoke strong emotions.
    However, the trial court followed established law and rendered findings that
    are supported by the certified record. Thus, we discern no abuse of discretion.
    Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s order.
    Order affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 10/18/2022
    - 18 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 496 MDA 2022

Judges: Bowes, J.

Filed Date: 10/18/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/18/2022