|
household with the child and that person openly held out the child | as that person's child. Section 1841 clarifies who the child's | parent or parents are and who is responsible for all aspects of | that child's welfare, including the child's financial welfare. | Section 1841 creates stability and security for every child in | Maine. |
|
| | Subsection 4 reflects that an adjudication of parentage may | include a determination of a de facto parent under section 1845. | Consistent with the Maine Supreme Judicial Court's recognition of | de facto parentage, the Maine amendment to the UPA includes de | facto parent as a category of adjudicated parentage under section | 1841. This section also clarifies that an adjudication of | parentage may occur even if the result will be that the child | will have more than two parents. |
|
| §1842.__No discrimination based on marital status |
|
| | A child born to parents who are not married to each other has | the same rights under the law as a child born to parents who are | married to each other. |
|
| | (This is section 202 of the UPA.) |
|
| | Source: UPA (1973) § 2 and Massachusetts Gen. Laws ch. 209C, § | 1. |
|
| | From a legal and social policy perspective, this is one of the | most significant substantive provisions of the Act, reaffirming | the principle that regardless of the marital status of the | parents, children and parents have equal rights with respect to | each other. As discussed in the Prefatory Note, supra, U.S. | Supreme Court decisions and lower federal and state court | decisions require equal treatment of marital and nonmarital | children without regard to the circumstances of their birth. |
|
| | Nonetheless, the equal treatment principle does not | necessarily eliminate all distinctions in the application of | other substantive laws to different kinds of children. For | example, as amended in 1991 the Uniform Probate Code § 2-705(b), | states: |
|
| Y in construing a dispositive provision of a transferor who is | not a natural parent, an individual born to the natural parent is | not considered a child of that parent unless the individual while | a minor lived as a regular member of the household of that parent | or of that parent's parent, brother, sister, spouse, or surviving | spouse. |
|
|