Holliman v. Green, AR-184

Decision Date13 October 1983
Docket NumberNo. AR-184,AR-184
Citation439 So.2d 955
PartiesLucy Ann HOLLIMAN and the State of Florida Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, Appellants, v. Donald Frank GREEN, Jr., Appellee.
CourtFlorida District Court of Appeals

Joseph R. Boyd and Michael L. Berry, Boyd & Smith, Tallahassee, and Chriss Walker, Fla. Dept. of Health and Rehabilitative Services, Tallahassee, for appellants.

Ralph Roberts, Roberts & Roberts, Jacksonville, for appellee.

LARRY G. SMITH, Judge.

We hold that trial court erred in dismissing appellants' amended complaint, which sought a determination of paternity of appellant Lucy Holliman's daughter, Amaris Bowen.

Appellants alleged that during the period of conception of Lucy Holliman's daughter, now seven years old, Lucy had sexual relations with her former husband and appellee, and no other man, and they asked the trial court to determine either the former husband or appellee to be the father of Lucy's daughter. The trial court dismissed the amended complaint against appellee because appellants were not able to allege facts which, if proven by clear and satisfactory evidence, would overcome the presumption that Amaris, who was born when Lucy was married to her former husband, was legitimate. We find that the trial court gave undue weight to the presumption of legitimacy at the pleading stage of this case, and also required undue specificity in the factual allegations of the complaint, considering the privilege of alternative pleading available under Rule 1.110(b), Florida Rules of Civil Procedure, and the scope of actions for determination of paternity under Section 742, Florida Statutes (1981), as augmented (particularly as to the case of HRS) by Sections 409.2551-409.2594, Florida Statutes (1981). See, also, Highland Insurance Company v. Walker Memorial Sanitorium and Benevolent Association, 225 So.2d 572, 576 (Fla. 2nd DCA 1969).

It is small wonder that the trial court dismissed the complaint against appellee in this case, given the allegation that Lucy had sexual relations with her husband (as well as appellee) at a time when the child could have been conceived. If the determination of paternity of a child conceived during wedlock should become no more than a kind of "shell game," then this area of our jurisprudence would indeed be in a deplorable state. This court in Yarmark v. Strickland, 193 So.2d 212 (Fla. 1st DCA 1966), no doubt held similar views when it declared that if either of two men could be the father of a child, the mother was not free to choose between them, and it was not permissible for the mother "or for the court as the trier of the facts to guess which of the two men was the father, and for the court to determine parentage of the child on such speculation." Id. at 214. We do not agree, however, that pronouncements such as appear in Yarmark would now preclude the filing of a complaint for determination of which of two possible men is a child's natural parent. We note that the Yarmark court itself limited the effect of its decision by distinguishing it from a case in which "identification of the father is indicated by some admissible test which may be furnished by advancing medical knowledge." Id. at 215. Later, in Roe v. Macy, 363 So.2d 616 (Fla. 1st DCA 1978), this court pointed out this distinguishing feature of Yarmark, that is, in Yarmark, "medical or scientific evidence was lacking." Id. at 617.

There can now be little doubt that medical knowledge has advanced far beyond that generally in use in paternity cases when Yarmark was decided. With the advent of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) testing, used in conjunction with red...

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