| As of the year 2000, the right of an "outsider" to claim |
paternity of a child born to a married woman varies considerably |
among the states. Thirty-three states allow a man alleging |
himself to be the father of a child with a presumed father to |
rebut the marital presumption. Some states have granted this |
right through legislation, while in other states case law has |
recognized the alleged father's right to rebut the presumption |
and establish his paternity. In some states, there is both |
statutory and common law support for the standing of a man |
alleging himself to be the father to assert his paternity of a |
child born to a married woman. Not that long ago, some states |
imposed an absolute bar on a man commencing a proceeding to |
establish his paternity if state law provides a statutory |
presumption of the paternity of another man. See Michael H. v. |
Gerald D., 491 U.S. 110, (1989). It is increasingly clear that |
those days are coming to an end. |