Everything about Paternity and Whatnot
Law and medicine define paternity in different ways. There may be scenarios that they come into terms but medicine defines paternity in more definitive and linear way. It should be noted however that medicine also accepts the non-biological relationship of a father and a child. In this way, paternity is categorized according to biological, social, or legal relationships with the child.
However, the law will define most of paternity rights based on several factors. This may include the cooperation of medicinal procedures in determining paternity identification.
Medicines definitive diagnosis of paternity is through biological relationship of a person to a child. Scenarios that involve non-biological parent-child relationship include adoptive parents raising their offspring and grandparents raising their grandchildren. When in times identification of paternity of biological father is a necessary, DNA testing is used for detection.
Meanwhile, law defines paternity as the legal acknowledgment of parental relationship between a man and a child based on many factors. In a case where a child is born to the wife during a marriage, such child is under the husbands care under the presumption of lawful paternity. Therefore, the husband has complete rights, duties and obligations to the child. This is defined under the common law.
This presumption however can be rebutted in a formal court. Therefore, establishing paternity and financial support or obligation can be removed based because the husband is not the real father. There are also cases of establishing paternity or claiming support and obligation, especially when a mother is unwed. This may come from the father voluntarily or involuntarily. Establishing paternity voluntarily is by being present at the birth of child or providing affidavit of owning the child. In the case of involuntary, a mother may petition the court for a determination of paternity. Usually, the father and the child undergo DNA testing. If the father does not submit to genetic testing, he can be determined as the childs father by default. The paternity rights of a man include support responsibility and visitation.
In addition, the court allows the father to file a parenting plan with a district court if he wishes to be an important part of the childs upbringing. Parenting plan, or also known as custody agreement, is a requirement in a divorce paperwork that lets the parent avoids future disagreements arising from lack of guidelines in dealing with obligations with regard to rearing the child. If the couple do not come up with an agreeable plan, the court may lay out its own parenting plan.
If inheritance rights are concerns, the responsibility to establish paternity and the attempt to dispute lie on the heirs of the deceased father.
In addition, there is a term called non-paternity event. This happens when the presumed father is not the biological one. Following such concept, mens rights activists for paternal discrepancy have coined the term paternity fraud. In cases of paternity fraud, potential victims may include the non-biological father, the child deprived of a relationship with his biological father, and the biological father who is deprived of his relationship with his child.
Worth noting are some paternity laws that assign full parental obligations to fathers even when women lie about contraception, deceit, or statutory rape by a woman.