LD 1526
pg. 73
Page 72 of 118 An Act To Enact the Uniform Parentage Act and Conforming Amendments and Additio... Page 74 of 118
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LR 134
Item 1

 
Subsection (c) resolves whether a divorce decree constitutes a
finding of paternity. This subsection provides that a decree is a
determination of paternity if the decree states that the child
was born of the marriage or grants the husband visitation or
custody, or orders support. This is the majority rule in American
jurisprudence.

 
Subsection (d) gives protection to third parties who may claim
benefit of an earlier determination of parentage.

 
Finally, the section is silent on whether state IV-D agencies
are bound by prior determinations of parentage. This
controversial issue is left to other state law. Similarly, issues
of collateral attack on final judgments are to be resolved by
recourse to other state law, as in civil proceedings generally.

 
Maine Comment

 
This section is gender neutral consistent with other Maine
amendments to the UPA.

 
SUBCHAPTER 7

 
CHILD OF ASSISTED REPRODUCTION

 
Comment

 
During the last thirty years, medical science has developed a
wide array of assisted reproductive technology, often referred to
as ART, which have enabled childless individuals and couples to
become parents. Thousands of children are born in the United
States each year as the result of ART. If a married couple uses
their own eggs and sperm to conceive a child born to the wife,
the parentage of the child is straightforward. The wife is the
mother--by gestation and genetics, the husband is the father--by
genetics and presumption. And, insofar as the Uniform Parentage
Act is concerned, neither parent fits the definition of a
"donor."

 
Current state laws and practices are not so straightforward,
however. If a woman gives birth to a child conceived using sperm
from a man other than her husband, she is the mother and her
husband, if any, is the presumed father. However, the man who
provided the sperm might assert his biological paternity, or the
husband might seek to rebut the martial presumption of paternity
by proving through genetic testing that he is not the genetic
father. As was the case in UPA (1973), it is necessary for the
new Act to clarify definitively the parentage of a child born
under these circumstances.


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