Courts - Biological Father Isn't
SEARCH BLOG: LAWSUIT
From the Detroit News - March 6, 2007
The U.S. Supreme Court declined Monday to hear the case of a Michigan man who has tried to sue to make a court declare him the biological father of an 8-year-old boy. The boy's birth certificate lists the Van Buren County man as his father.
The court, issuing its order without comment, declined to review a ruling by the Michigan Supreme Court last year that barred Michael Barnes Jr. of Gobles from filing suit because the child was conceived when the mother was married to another man.
Under Michigan law, a husband is presumed to be the legal father if a baby is conceived during a marriage.
Barnes had lived with the child's mother, Kim Jeudevine of Kalamazoo, and helped raise the child for more than four years until 2003, when their relationship ended.
Barnes has sought the right to sue for a paternity determination, which he needs to seek custody and parental rights.
Is this unique or what? A Michigan law, probably written in the Victorian era, prevents a father from being a father. In an age when biological fathers skip out of their legal responsibilities for child support and involvement in their childrens' lives, here is the U.S. Supreme Court deciding that it doesn't want to hear from a father who wants to take the responsibility of being a father.
Remember this the next time you read about the courts granting rights for illegal immigrants and other fringe special interest groups. And we wonder what's going wrong with America.