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11 J. Contemp. Legal Issues 475 (2000-2001)
Michael H. v. Gerald D.

handle is hein.journals/contli11 and id is 489 raw text is: Michael H. v. Gerald D.
SHARON SMITH
Family Law, April 1999
California law, like nature itself, makes no provision for dual
fatherhood.' In Michael H. v. Gerald D. the Supreme Court grappled for
the first time with the question of a biological father's relationship with his
child whose mother was married to another man when the child was born.2
A deeply fractured Court, in a plurality opinion authored by Justice Scalia,
held a state law was not unconstitutional that, in conclusively presuming
the husband is the father of a child born to his wife, denies the biological
father what otherwise would be his due process rights to establish his
paternity.3
Statement of Case and Facts
The facts of this case are, we must hope, extraordinary.4     Carole
married Gerald in 1976 and settled in Southern California. In 1978 Carole
began an adulterous affair with Michael while living with Gerald. She
gave birth to Victoria in 1981. Gerald's name was on Victoria's birth certi-
ficate, and he assumed parental responsibility for and treated her as his
child. Carole told Michael the child was his, and blood tests of Michael,
Carole and Victoria six months after Victoria's birth established a 98.07%
likelihood that Michael was Victoria's father. During a brief period in early
1982 Victoria and Carole lived with Michael after which Carole broke off
their relationship.
1.  Michael H. v. Gerald D., 491 U.S. 110, 118 (1989) (Michael H.).
2.  Michael H., at 158.
3.  Id. at 110-111. Chief Justice Rehnquist joined Justice Scalia's opinion in its
entirety. Justices O'Connor and Kennedy joined all but a footnote in the opinion. Justice
Stevens concurred in the judgment; thus, one may claim his opinion is the real opinion of
the Court. Justice Brennan was joined in dissent by Justices Marshall and Blackmun, and
also joined in Justice White's dissent.
4.  So Justice Scalia commences his recitation of the facts, which are summarized
here from pages 113-15 of the plurality opinion.

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