| | 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. |
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| | Subsection (d) gives protection to third parties who may claim | benefit of an earlier determination of parentage. |
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| | 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. |
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| | This section is gender neutral consistent with other Maine | amendments to the UPA. |
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| CHILD OF ASSISTED REPRODUCTION |
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| | 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." |
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| | 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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