State ex rel. Munoz v. Bravo, 2
Decision Date | 09 February 1984 |
Docket Number | No. 2,CA-CIV,2 |
Citation | 678 P.2d 974,139 Ariz. 393 |
Parties | STATE of Arizona, ex rel., Ana Varela MUNOZ, Plaintiff/Appellee, v. Ricardo BRAVO, Defendant/Appellant. 4855. |
Court | Arizona Court of Appeals |
This appeal from a finding of paternity raises the following questions: (1) Whether the presumption of legitimacy was overcome; (2) whether it was appropriate to admit resemblance evidence, and (3) whether the trial court was correct in admitting the results of HLA blood tests and in admitting calculations of the probability of paternity. We affirm.
In Arizona the presumption of legitimacy is a rebuttable presumption. Anonymous v. Anonymous, 10 Ariz.App. 496, 460 P.2d 32 (1969). The burden of overcoming the presumption of legitimacy is upon the person challenging it, Coffman v. Coffman, 121 Ariz. 522, 591 P.2d 1010 (App.1979), and this must be established by clear and convincing evidence. Coffman v. Coffman, supra; Pyeatte v. Pyeatte, 21 Ariz.App. 448, 520 P.2d 542 (1974).
The presumption of legitimacy may be overcome by proper and sufficient evidence showing that during the period when conception must have taken place the husband did not have sexual intercourse with his wife. Coffman v. Coffman, supra. The only evidence in this case of the husband's non-access to the wife was the testimony of Miss Munoz that she had not seen or heard from her husband Carlos Munoz for approximately ten years and that in fact she lived in Arizona and Mr. Munoz lived in Mexico and was unable to enter this country because his passport had been revoked. This evidence was uncontradicted and apparently was believed by the trial court.
While it is true that Miss Munoz is an interested party, she is competent to testify despite the fact that this is a paternity suit, as the "Lord Mansfield rule" no longer applies. That rule prevented either the father or the mother of a child from testifying as to legitimacy and was abolished in Arizona in Coffman v. Coffman, supra. The evidence was competent and uncontradicted. We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court's decision to accept it.
Appellant asks the court to reconsider its decision in State v. Cabrera, 13 Ariz.App. 527, 478 P.2d 142 (1970), allowing evidence of resemblance to be admitted in paternity cases. In this case the child, Renee was led into the court and stood next to appellant. In addition, the child's mother testified as to the resemblance between the child and appellant and the court admitted photographs of Renee and photographs of appellant's admitted children when they were less than five years old. We decline appellant's invitation to reconsider. As the court said in State v. Cabrera, supra:
13 Ariz.App. at 529, 478 P.2d 142.
In addition the court in Cabrera stated that the receipt of the mother's opinion as to the resemblance between the child and the defendant was not error and that objections should go only to the weight and not to the admissibility of such evidence. We feel that the same reasoning should be applied to resemblance evidence when it pertains to the children of the defendant as well as to the defendant himself.
Appellant's next contention is that the court erred in admitting calculations of the probability of paternity based upon HLA blood tests run by the state's expert witness. HLA testing stands for Human Leucocyte Antigen testing and is a form of tissue typing which is done by taking a blood test. It is able to eliminate a larger portion of the population than the better known ABO blood typing. See Ellman and Kaye, Probabilities and Proof: Can HLA and Blood Group Testing Prove Paternity? 54 N.Y.L.Rev. 1131.
Assuming that a putative father is not ruled out by HLA testing, then statistical analysis of the different factors or haplotypes can provide other sorts of information. For example, by determining what percentage of the population has a particular haplotype you can statistically determine the probability that a particular individual would be excluded as the father. In addition by taking into account other information such as the number of persons who could conceivably be the father, it is possible to determine the probability that a particular person is indeed the father. This is called a probability of paternity. In order to determine the probability of paternity, however, the other non-medical evidence referred to above must be expressed statistically. That is, it must be expressed in terms of the probability from non-medical evidence that a particular person is the father. Ellman and Kaye, supra, at 1147-52. For example, if a woman...
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