B.C. v. C.P. & D.B. (majority)
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In this case, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania was tasked with determining whether multiple periods of separation prior to filing a paternity action were enough to preclude the application of the presumption of paternity. The presumption of paternity is a legal doctrine which presumes that a child conceived or born during a marriage is a child of that marriage. The court held that a marital couple's separation prior to the filing of the paternity action does not, per se, preclude the application of the presumption of paternity.
In this case, a woman (Mother) and her husband (Husband) were married and separated multiple times. During one of their separations, the woman had unprotected sexual intercourse with another man (B.C.). After the woman became pregnant and gave birth to a child, B.C. filed a paternity action. The woman and her husband, who had since reconciled, argued that the presumption of paternity should apply because they were married at the time of the child's conception and remained married at the time of the paternity action.
The lower courts held that the presumption did not apply due to the couple's multiple separations. However, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania reversed this decision, finding that although temporary separations are a factor to consider in determining whether a marriage is intact, they are not dispositive. The court concluded that the couple's marriage was intact at the time of the paternity action and the presumption of paternity applied, effectively dismissing B.C.’s paternity action.
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