DocketNumber: No. FA99-0629619
Judges: LIFSHITZ, FAMILY SUPPORT MAGISTRATE.
Filed Date: 2/1/2000
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The petition is dated and signed July 13, 1999. A return of service indicates abode service in the Town of Hartford on August 14, 1999. The court date to which the defendant was summoned was October 12, 1999. The defendant died1 on September 25, 1999. The court has been asked to determine whether the paternity case can continue in view of the death of the putative father. The court appointed counsel for the minor child.
At common law the death of a party abated an action. Barton v.Town of New Haven,
Our courts have long followed the mandate of the statute and allowed actions properly commenced to continue after the death of a party upon substitution of an executor or administrator.Clemens v. Harris,
In researching this issue the court did find one line of cases which would preclude this action from proceeding. In Sanders v.Sanders, Superior Court, judicial district of New London at Norwich, doc. no. 060787 (Booth, J.) the administratrix moved to substitute herself for the deceased plaintiff in a dissolution of marriage action. The administratrix sought to enforce a division of property ordered in the judgment but never completed by the defendant. The court denied the motion, holding that because a dissolution action is a statutory proceeding and that an administratrix is not one of the specific categories of persons permitted to intervene in such an action, the court did not have subject matter jurisdiction to allow the substitution of parties. The same court issued a similar ruling in Abel v. Abel,
It could be argued that Abel and Sanders compel a similar result in the present case. Like an action for dissolution of a marriage, a paternity action — or at least one brought pursuant to General Statutes §
This court is persuaded that even in the context of a statutory action, Abel and Sanders render an overly restrictive interpretation. First, there is substantial authority suggesting that the remedy provided in General Statutes §
"Survival of actions is the rule and not the exception, and the presumption is that every cause or right of action survives until the contrary is made to appear." Terwilliger v. Terwilliger,
The statute has been utilized in family cases. In Dalton v.Dalton,
At least one court applied the statute directly in a paternity matter. In a petition brought under General Statutes §
"A paternity action is a civil action and that statute applies CT Page 1433 to civil actions. The death of a putative father does not defeat or render useless a paternity action any more than the nonappearance of a defendant in such action. Judgments have often been rendered against a nonappearing defendant in paternity cases in this state when all other jurisdictional requirements are met. The reasons for rendering such a judgment are obvious."
"There are no cases in Connecticut in which the issue presented by this appeal has been decided. The brief filed by the defendant B's attorney, however, does cite cases in other jurisdictions where this issue has been decided in favor of the child. The evidence is simply too overwhelming to reach any other conclusion but that the decedent was the natural father of B. To reach a contrary conclusion would be terribly unjust. It would penalize a young child for something over which that child had no control."Anonymous v. Administrator (1983-2),
In another Connecticut case a plaintiff mother was allowed to continue a paternity case brought against the estate of the putative father where he died in a motor vehicle accident prior to commencement of the suit. After reviewing established authority which would preclude such an action, including Hayes v.Smith,
The court provided a historical review of the advancement from blood grouping to HLA to DNA testing for paternity matters, noting the progression of statutory changes to match scientific advancement. The court then noted: "When one parent is unavailable, as in the present case, DNA fingerprinting may also be utilized to effectively establish a "probability" of paternity by testing relatives of the unavailable parent. [J.E. Cullins, Jr., Should the Legitimate Child be Forced to Pay for the Sins ofher Father? Sudwischer v. Estate of Hoffpauir, 53 La.L.Rev. 1675, 1714 (1993)]. The DNA "print" of a father, mother, or other relative of the deceased putative father can be compared to the DNA prints of the child and the available mother to determine CT Page 1434 whether the parties are related. Although the process can not be deemed conclusive, it has been recognized by the scientific community as quite valuable. Paternity Testing: Blood GroupSystems and DNA Analysis by Variable Number of Tandem RepeatMarkers, 35 Journal of Forensic Sciences 1217-1225 (1990)." The court concluded that "the fair prosecution of this paternity action does not necessarily depend upon the continued existence of" the deceased putative father. Citing General Statutes §
In addition to the interest of the State and the plaintiff mother, the child Teecoiyah Taylor's "interest in establishing paternity is a fundamental state and federal constitutional liberty interest [which] the judicial system must afford the child an opportunity to exercise and protect. . . ."Andrews-White v. Mitchell,
Accordingly, the State is directed pursuant to General Statutes §
BY THE COURT
Harris T. Lifshitz Family Support Magistrate