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"Non-Bio" Gay Dad Prevails in Texas Parentage Battle

Posted: 02/25/2011 9:19 pm

A recent decision by the Texas Court of Appeals in Houston illustrates the complexity -- and the nastiness -- of one particularly ugly gay divorce. The partners lived in Houston but they traveled to Canada in 2003 to get married and then they registered as domestic partners in California in 2005. Because of the restrictions on gay partnerships and parentage in Texas, they arranged for a surrogate in California to bear their child (with sperm donated from one of them). Prior to the child's birth they obtained a pre-birth declaration of parentage under the Uniform Parentage Act, which is lawful in California. A pre-birth parentage judgment is one of those newly-created legal devices to establish parentage for gay male couples using a surrogate,with both men designated as legal parents even though only one of them has a biological connection to the child. The non-standard nature of this proceeding has become the subject of legal conflict, now that the couple has broken up.

The California parentage judgment expressly stated that both men were legal parents (and the surrogate would not be a parent) and the underlying documents confirmed that the two men were entitled to share custody of the child. This was not controversial when the couple was together, but now, one of the issues in their dissolution proceeding is whether that implied "finding" of joint custody would be binding on the parties now that they have broken up. The bio-dad took the position that the pre-birth decree wasn't binding at all, and that even if it was binding the custody determination was not enforceable. Fortunately the state Court of Appeals disagreed with the bio-dad, and confirmed the validity of the California judgment and its implied custody finding.

Straight couples have their share of nasty break-ups, for sure. Thus, what is "gay" about this battle is not its nastiness, but rather, the legal complexity of the partnership and parentage arrangements and how those complexities play out in the dissolution process. And that is what makes this case both instructive and newsworthy.

Rather than simply getting married in Texas, having kids the old fashioned way, and then getting divorced and having a custody battle in their home town, these guys traveled first to Canada and then to California to legalize their partnership. They hired a surrogate to bear their child and used an unconventional (but lawful) court proceeding in California to establish themselves as legal parents. Now, they may find themselves unable to obtain a dissolution of their partnership or marriage in their home state, since Texas courts have refused in the past to "honor" same-sex marriages by divorcing the partners. And, as this case demonstrates, the bio-dad was able to raise the atypical nature of the parentage judgment in an effort to deprive his ex-partner of shared custody of their child.

This case is a sad illustration of the harmful consequences of what may be the worst aspects of anti-gay bias: discrimination in the form of legal complexity! But ideally, in the future all states will allow same-sex couples to get married and to parent children, and all states will adjudicate the inevitable dissolutions in the same manner as the straight ones. There will still be painful high-conflict divorces, but at least the legal complications of the gay divorces will not be so messy -- or so legally complicated.


 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mPowerServices
People are fickle...fanned today, gone 2morrow
09:22 PM on 03/17/2011
What!? Are you saying they are misbehaving like straight parents? And no one saw this coming? Hello...the problem is it is still two humans and humans sure can make a mess out of things. And in the case of divorce and custody, we can make a mean, ugly mess. No law is going to make this easier because straight folks have had all this time and they haven't figured it out yet either.
02:04 PM on 03/15/2011
The Biological father signed away his exclusive biological claim to the child when they got the surrogate. So, why is it a shock that he might not get custody in a divorce? Has anyone considered the fact that the court has to decide custody based upon the best interests of the child? Could it be that custody was given to the better parent? It would be a different story if the non-bio was only assigned adoptive status only.
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Ed Baker
Militant Moderate
05:10 PM on 03/14/2011
If the gay bio-parent uses any of the anti-gay hate in Texas to prevail, he should have his gay card revoked! Not that we haven't seen that before with lesbian couples......
10:34 AM on 03/03/2011
It's disgusting they would act this way. Unless someone is unfit, they both agreed to parent the child and that should be the end of it. This is just using the child to punish the ex. Glad the court upheld the parentage judgment.
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Ed Baker
Militant Moderate
05:10 PM on 03/14/2011
It's what heterosexual parents do all the time.
08:43 AM on 02/27/2011
This is a great case to study, since - at its core - it's addressing the age-old bio vs. non-bio parent rights issue. This stuff continues to confound family courts and it's a doozy for both sex parental rights groups. Among the other matters is raises (gay rights), it also gives us a chance to discuss "psychological parent" and whether biology reigns supreme.

Nice article.
02:41 AM on 03/01/2011
Of course, not one mention of what the child might want. Or that the child is anything other than a contested piece of property. Does 'conventional' divorce take the real status of the child[ren] into account i.e., do the children have lawyers representing their interest.

As a child i learned that the 1st Amendment does not apply to children. Children have no redress against censorship. Because the child belongs to someone, the school, while ze is there, is in loco parentis. The Founding Fathers did not consider anyone without land a citizen. The extension of the franchise to more and wider groups is still being fought, but no one talks of the native child as citizen. Why shd not some one who can read not be allowed to vote for President? in fact, to have an opinion, one need not be literate. An indiscriminate perusal of the comments on these kinds of discussions suggests that one not be 'literate' to compose a comment. So why not when a child is old enough to understand that they are making an important choice (what? 5 - i think a 3 year old capable of deciding "I like this candidate, i don't like this other candidate.")
07:40 AM on 02/26/2011
The bigger news is that the reality of a child apparently forces the Texas courts to IN FACT recognize the existence of gay relationships and gay families. Sic semper Texas.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
onwisconsin
Trust women; protect choice.
11:31 PM on 03/25/2011
That's what I read into this as well.