Robin Meadow secured this reversal despite an earlier published case that seemed directly contrary.
When GMSR’s client discovered that his former wife had placed his name on the birth certificate of a child born fourteen months after they divorced, he sued to obtain a declaration of nonpaternity. The trial court ruled that he lacked standing under the Uniform Parentage Act. It construed the Act to require that a person in the client’s position must be a “presumed father” – that is, someone who “receives the child into his home and openly holds out the child as his natural child” – in order to file a nonpaternity petition.
The Court of Appeal ruled that the apparently contrary decision did not apply. Observing that “[the] ‘acid test’ of statutory construction is always whether an interpretation yields [an] absurd result,” it agreed with GMSR that “respondent’s argument produces the absurd result that a man must both plead and prove he is the child’s presumed father in order to have standing to disprove paternity under [the Act].”
© 2025 Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland LLP.
All rights reserved. Disclaimer - Attorney advertising. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.
6420 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 1100
Los Angeles, California 90048
p: (310) 859 7811 | f: (310) 276 5261
50 California Street, Suite 1500
San Francisco, CA 94111
p: (415) 315 1774
© 2025 Greines, Martin, Stein & Richland LLP.
All rights reserved. Disclaimer - Attorney advertising. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome.
We welcome your inquiry. However, sending us an email does not create an attorney-client relationship. For that reason, you should not send us any kind of confidential information. Until we have agreed to represent you, we cannot be obligated to keep it confidential.