LD 1526
pg. 18
Page 17 of 118 An Act To Enact the Uniform Parentage Act and Conforming Amendments and Additio... Page 19 of 118
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LR 134
Item 1

 
Source: UPA (1973) § 4.

 
A network of presumptions was established by UPA (1973) for
application to cases in which proof of external circumstances
indicate a particular man to be the probable father. The simplest
of these is also the best known--birth of a child during the
marriage between the mother and a man. When promulgated in 1973
the contemporaneous commentary noted that:

 
While perhaps no one state now includes all these presumptions in
its law, the presumptions are based on existing presumptions of
'legitimacy' in state laws and do not represent a serious
departure. Novel is that they have been collected under one roof.
All presumptions of paternity are rebuttable in appropriate
circumstances. Uniform Parentage Act (1973), Prefatory Note, 9B
U.L.A. 379 (2001).

 
After amendments adopted in 2002, the Uniform Parentage Act
retains all but one of the original presumptions of paternity
contained in UPA § 4 (1973). Originally the 2000 version of the
new Act limited presumptions of paternity to those related to
marriage. The objection by the ABA Steering Committee on the
Unmet Legal Needs of Children and the Section of Individual
Rights and Responsibilities that this could result in
differential treatment of children born to unmarried parents
resulted in the revision to this section.

 
Subsection (1) deals with a child born during a marriage;
subsection (2) deals with a child conceived during marriage but
born after its termination; subsection (3) deals with a child
conceived or born during an invalid marriage; and, subsection (4)
deals with a child born before a valid or invalid marriage,
accompanied by other facts indicating the husband is the father.

 
Added by amendment in 2002, subsection (5), is a significant
revision of UPA § 4(4) (1973), which created a presumption of
paternity if a man "receives the child into his home and openly
holds out the child as his natural child." Because there was no
time frame specified in the 1973 act, the language fostered
uncertainty about whether the presumption could arise if the
receipt of the child into the man's home occurred for a short
time or took place long after the child's birth. To more fully
serve the goal of treating nonmarital and marital children
equally, the "holding out" presumption is restored, subject to an
express durational requirement that the man reside with the child
for the first two years of the child's life. This mirrors the
presumption applied to a married man established by § 607, infra.
Once this presumption arises, it is subject to attack only under
the limited circumstances set forth in § 607 for challenging a


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