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107 W. Va. L. Rev. 867 (2004-2005)
The Plight of Putative Father: Public Policy v. Paternity Fraud

handle is hein.journals/wvb107 and id is 877 raw text is: THE PLIGHT OF A PUTATIVE FATHER:
PUBLIC POLICY V. PATERNITY FRAUD
I.      INTRODUCTION  ..................................................................................... 867
II.     R ES  JUDICATA  ....................................................................................... 869
A.      Res  Judicata  in  D ivorce ........................................................... 871
B.      Exceptions to Res Judicata ............................. 873
IIl.   FRAUD AND FRAUDULENT CONCEALMENT .......................................... 874
A .     Types  of   F raud   ........................................................................ 881
B.      West Virginia's Application of the Fraud Exception ............... 883
C.      West Virginia's Public Policy and its Relationship to Fraud.. 885
D.      How Other States are Dealing with Paternity Fraud .............. 888
IV.     THE WEST VIRGINIA SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS'
ANALYSIS  OF  BErTYL. W . ..................................................................... 890
V.      STATES THAT REFUSE TO APPLY RES JUDICATA IN PATERNITY
DISESTABLISHM  ENT  CASES .................................................................. 895
VI.     W EST VIRGINIA' S SOLUTION? .............................................................. 897
I. INTRODUCTION
It seems both fair and logical to think that a putative father, or a man
who is not the biological father of his child, should cease paying child support
once he has disestablished paternity. Surprisingly, in West Virginia and several
other jurisdictions, a putative father who has disestablished paternity is often
forced to pay child support if he is divorced and the child at issue was born dur-
ing his marriage. This problem is more prevalent in cases of divorce because
parties are expected to resolve all issues concerning the marriage, such as child
custody, child support, alimony, property settlements, and paternity, in a divorce
proceeding. If a putative father is not aware that paternity is at issue, how is he
expected to raise the issue of paternity in a divorce proceeding? Many courts
share the opinion that a final divorce order is a final adjudication on the merits
of all issues concerning a marriage.1 Therefore, if a final divorce order has been
rendered and a putative father subsequently discovers that he is not the biologi-
I   See Nancy Darlene M. v. James Lee M., Jr., 400 S.E.2d 882, 885 (W. Va. 1990), amended
by 464 S.E.2d 79 (w. Va. 1995).

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