LD 1526
pg. 52
Page 51 of 118 An Act To Enact the Uniform Parentage Act and Conforming Amendments and Additio... Page 53 of 118
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LR 134
Item 1

 
The control of the records is left to other state law. In some
states paternity records are open to the public, and a fundamental
change in handling of the records is beyond the scope of this Act.
The accreditation agencies provide guidance on this subject. For
example, the American Association of Blood Banks requires that
accredited laboratories maintain records for at least five years.
Because a laboratory performing testing under this Act should be
accredited, see § 503(a), supra, protection is thus provided to the
tested person's records under the accreditation standards.

 
SUBCHAPTER 6

 
PROCEEDING TO ADJUDICATE PARENTAGE

 
Article 1

 
Nature of Proceeding

 
§1921.__Proceeding authorized

 
A civil proceeding may be maintained to adjudicate the
parentage of a child. The proceeding is governed by the Maine
Rules of Civil Procedure.

 
Comment

 
(This is section 601 of the UPA.)

 
Source: UPA (1973) § 14.

 
A determination of paternity is governed by the ordinary rules
of civil procedure. The party seeking to establish paternity is
entitled to full discovery, to compel the testimony of all
witnesses, and to have the case tried by a preponderance of the
evidence. "The equipoise of the private interests that are at
stake in a paternity proceeding supports the conclusion that the
standard of proof normally applied in private litigation is also
appropriate for these cases." Rivera v. Minnich, 483 U.S. 574,
581 (1987).

 
A corresponding amendment to UPC § 2-114 was not made until
the major revision of 1990 (as further revised in 1993). By that
time, it had been recognized as illogical and unjust to impose
discriminatory burdens on children born out-of-wedlock who were
seeking paternal inheritance. It also had been ruled
unconstitutional by application of the intermediate scrutiny test
formulated under the 14th Amendment. Reed v. Campbell, 476 U.S.
852 (1986) Moreover, by 1990 the preponderance of the evidence


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