BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    �



                                                                  SB 1476
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          SENATE THIRD READING
          SB 1476 (Leno)
          As Amended  August 22, 2012
          Majority vote 

           SENATE VOTE  :24-13  
           
           JUDICIARY           7-2         APPROPRIATIONS      11-5        
           
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          |Ayes:|Feuer, Atkins, Dickinson, |Ayes:|Fuentes, Blumenfield,     |
          |     |Huber, Monning,           |     |Bradford, Campos, Davis,  |
          |     |Wieckowski,               |     |Gatto, Hall, Hill, Lara,  |
          |     |Bonnie Lowenthal          |     |Mitchell, Solorio         |
          |     |                          |     |                          |
          |-----+--------------------------+-----+--------------------------|
          |Nays:|Wagner, Gorell            |Nays:|Harkey, Donnelly,         |
          |     |                          |     |Nielsen, Norby, Wagner    |
           ----------------------------------------------------------------- 

           SUMMARY  :  Permits a court, in appropriate cases, to find that a 
          child has more than two legal parents.  Specifically,  this bill  : 


          1)Provides that nothing in the Uniform Parentage Act should be 
            construed to preclude a finding that a child has a 
            parent-child relationship with more than two parents.

          2)Allows a court to find that a presumption of paternity is not 
            necessarily rebutted by a judgment establishing paternity by 
            another person. 

          3)Provides that where two or more claims or presumptions of 
            parentage have been established, a court may find that a child 
            has more than two natural or adoptive parents if it is 
            required to serve the best interests of the child.  Requires 
            the court, in determining the best interest of the child, to 
            consider the nature, duration, and quality of the presumed or 
            claimed parents' relationships with the child, and the benefit 
            or detriment to the child of continuing those relationships. 

          4)Provides that in any case where a child has more than two 
            legal parents, the court shall allocate custody and visitation 
            among the parents based on the best interest of the child, 
            including, but not limited to stability for the child.  States 








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            that this may mean that not all parents share legal or 
            physical custody of the child.

          5)Provides that the statewide child support guideline shall 
            apply in any case with more than two parents, unless the court 
            finds that application of the guideline is unjust or 
            inappropriate.  Provides that the guideline amount may be 
            rebutted in any case where a child has more than two legal 
            parents.  Provides that this shall not be construed to require 
            reprogramming of the California Child Support Automation 
            System, a change in the guideline, or a revision in any 
            Department of Child Support Services' (DCSS) regulation, 
            policy, procedure, form or training material.

          6)Contains chaptering out amendments for SB 1064 (De Le�n).



           EXISTING LAW  :

          1)Establishes the California Uniform Parentage Act (UPA).  
            Defines a parent and child relationship as the legal 
            relationship existing between a child and the child's natural 
            or adoptive parents incident to which the law confers or 
            imposes rights, privileges, duties and obligations.  The term 
            includes the mother and child relationship and the father and 
            child relationship.  

          2)Provides that the child of a wife who is living with her 
            husband, who is not sterile, is conclusively presumed to be a 
            child of the marriage, except as provided.  

          3)Defines a man as a presumed father if, among other things:  a) 
            he was married to the child's mother and the child was born 
            within 300 days of the marriage; b) he attempted to marry the 
            child's mother; or, c) he holds the child out as his own.  
            Requires that these presumptions be applied gender neutrally.  


          4)If two or more paternity presumptions conflict with one 
            another, the presumption that is founded on the weightier 
            considerations of policy and logic controls.  Provides that a 
            presumption of parentage is rebutted by a judgment 
            establishing paternity of the child by another man.  









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          5)Provides that paternity may be established by voluntary 
            declaration for unmarried parents, or through a civil action 
            brought by any interested party, as specified.  

          6)Provides that domestic partners have the same rights, 
            protections, and benefits, and shall be subject to the same 
            responsibilities, obligations and duties under law as are 
            granted to and imposed on spouses.  
           
           7)Outlines factors the court shall consider in determining the 
            best interest of the child, including, among others, the 
            health, safety, and welfare of the child; any history of abuse 
            by one parent or any other person seeking custody against 
            another child, the other parent, a spouse or significant 
            other; the nature and amount of contact the child has with 
            both parents; and any other factors the court finds relevant.  


          8)Provides that custody of a child should be granted in the 
            following order of preference:  to parents jointly; to either 
            parent taking into consideration which parent is more likely 
            to allow the child frequent and continuing contact with the 
            noncustodial parent; to the person in whose home the child has 
            been living in a wholesome and stable environment.  Allows the 
            court and the family the widest discretion to choose a 
            parenting plan that is in the best interest of the child.  

          9)Provides a formula for calculating child support, and provides 
            a rebuttable presumption that the formula results in a correct 
            amount.  This presumption can be rebutted by, among other 
            factors, the fact that application of the formula would be 
            unjust or inappropriate due to special circumstances.  




           FISCAL EFFECT  :  According to the Assembly Appropriations 
          Committee:

          1)Minor costs to DCSS.  Because it is likely that there will be 
            few cases where a court finds that a child has more than two 
            parents, DCSS should not need to reprogram the statewide child 
            support automation system or make any changes to its uniform 
            guidelines.  DCSS, however, contends that this legislation 
            will require $6.4 million for the one-time costs associated 








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            with reprogramming the child support automation system, 
            updating training materials, child support regulations, data 
            reports, policies, and procedures which will all take 
            approximately 18,000 staff hours.  The bill, however, 
            explicitly states that changes need not be made to the support 
            automation system, the uniform child support guidelines or any 
            other DCSS forms or materials.  In addition, it is likely that 
            local child support agencies are already dealing with complex 
            family structures and multiple parents in their efforts to 
            recoup California Work Opportunity and Responsibility to Kids 
            (CalWORKs) payments and foster care payments. Therefore, any 
            costs to DCSS should be minor and absorbable within existing 
            resources. 

          2)To the extent a court establishes more than two parents and 
            this bill allows a third parent to take custody of child who 
            would otherwise be placed in foster care, it would result in 
            minor savings to the child welfare system.  
           
          COMMENTS  :  Legal parenthood can be established in a number of 
          different ways.  A man is conclusively presumed to be the father 
          of a child if he was married to, or in a registered domestic 
          partnership with, and cohabitating with the child's mother, 
          except as specified.  A man who receives a child into his home 
          and holds the child out as his own is also presumed a father of 
          the child.  A man who signs a voluntary declaration of paternity 
          is presumed to be the legal father of a child.  While the 
          statutory scheme uses the word "father," the presumptions must 
          be applied gender neutrally, so they apply to mothers as well.  
          (See, e.g., Elisa B. V. Superior Court (2005) 37 Cal.4th 108.)

          Because of the presumptions of paternity available under law, it 
          is possible in limited situations for more than two people to 
          claim parentage of a child.  The Family Code provides that where 
          two or more presumptions arise that are in conflict with each 
          other, the presumption which on the facts is founded on the 
          weightier considerations of policy and logic controls.  In 2011 
          a Court of Appeal held that when two or more people meet the 
          legal definition of a parent, a court may recognize only two of 
          them as legal parents.  (In re M.C. (2011) 195 Cal.App.4th 197.) 
           This bill instead provides that where there are more than two 
          people who have established claims or presumptions of parentage 
          under existing California law, the court may recognize more than 
          two parents, but only if doing so is required to protect the 
          best interests of the child.  








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          In re M.C. clarified the importance of greater flexibility for 
          courts in determining the number of legal parents permitted.  In 
          that case, a juvenile court found that three parents were a 
          child's presumed parents - the biological mother, the child's 
          presumed mother, by virtue of her marriage to the biological 
          mother, and the biological father, who conceived the child with 
          the biological mother during a premarital relationship.  The 
          child was in foster care as a result of the biological mother's 
          involvement in the stabbing of the child's presumed mother.  The 
          juvenile court recognized all three parents, hoping to place the 
          child with the father, but the court of appeals reversed, 
          potentially depriving the child of a loving father, writing that 
          such recognition lies, more appropriately, with the Legislature:

               M.C. and the amicus curiae invite us to employ this case as 
               a vehicle to highlight the inadequacies of the antiquated 
               UPA to accommodate rapidly changing familial structures and 
               the need to recognize and accommodate novel parenting 
               relationships.  We agree these issues are critical, and 
               California's existing statutory framework is ill equipped 
               to resolve them.  But even if the extremely unusual factual 
               circumstances of this unfortunate case made it an 
               appropriate action in which to take on such complex 
               practical, political and social matters, we would not be 
               free to do so.  Such important policy determinations, which 
               will profoundly impact families, children and society, are 
               best left to the Legislature.  

          (Id. at 214.)
           
           Currently, several other states have recognized that there are 
          situations where a child can have more than two people in his or 
          her life with the rights and responsibilities of parents.  In 
          2007 a Pennsylvania court upheld an award of partial custody to 
          a biological mother's same-sex partner, with partial custody to 
          the biological mother and sperm donor, who had been involved as 
          a parent since infancy.  The court held that all three had an 
          obligation to support the child.  (Jacob v. Shultz-Jacob 923 
          A.2d 473 (Pa. Super. 2007).)  A Maine court found that a child 
          may have a non-biological, de facto parent with parental rights 
          and responsibilities in addition to two biological parents.  
          (C.E.W. v. D.E.W. (Me. 2004) 845 A.2d 1146, 1149-51.)  Delaware 
          recognizes three types of legal parents under statute:  a 
          natural parent, an adoptive parent, and a de facto parent.  








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          (Del. Title 13, Sec. 8-201.)  

           
          Analysis Prepared by  :    Leora Gershenzon / JUD. / (916) 
          319-2334


                                                                FN: 0005244