THE SENATE |
S.B. NO. |
2747 |
THIRTY-FIRST LEGISLATURE, 2022 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
Relating to the uniform parentage act.
BE IT
ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. This measure enacts the Uniform Parentage Act of 2017 (UPA) to replace the Uniform Parentage Act of 1973. The UPA seeks to do the following: ensure the equal treatment of children born to same-sex couples, establish a de facto parent as a legal parent, include surrogacy provisions to reflect developments in that area, and address the rights of children born through assisted reproductive technology.
SECTION 2. The Hawaii Revised Statutes is amended by adding a new chapter to be appropriately designated and to read as follows:
"Chapter
UNIFORM
PARENTAGE ACT
PART I. GENERAL PROVISIONS
§ -1 Short title. This chapter may be cited as the Uniform Parentage Act.
§ -2 Definitions. As used in this chapter:
"Acknowledged
parent" means an individual who has established a
parent-child relationship under part III.
"Alleged
genetic parent" means an individual who is alleged to be, or alleges that
the individual is, a genetic parent or possible genetic parent of a
child whose parentage has not been adjudicated. "Alleged genetic parent" does not include
a presumed parent, an individual whose parental rights have been terminated or
declared not to exist, or a donor.
"Assisted
reproduction" means a method of causing pregnancy other than sexual
intercourse, including intrauterine or intracervical insemination, donation of
gametes, donation of embryos, in-vitro fertilization and transfer of embryos,
and intracytoplasmic sperm injection.
"Birth"
includes stillbirth.
"Child" means an individual of any age whose parentage is determined pursuant to this chapter.
"Child
support enforcement agency" means a state agency created pursuant to
chapter 576D.
"Determination
of parentage" means establishment of a parent-child relationship by
judicial or administrative proceeding or signing of a valid acknowledgement of
parentage under part IV.
"Donor"
means an individual who provides gametes intended for use in assisted
reproduction, whether or not for consideration. "Donor" does not include an
individual who gives birth to a child conceived by assisted reproduction
except as otherwise provided in part VIII, a parent under part VIII,
or an intended parent under part IX.
"Gamete"
means sperm, egg, or any part of a sperm or egg.
"Genetic
testing" means an analysis of genetic markers to identify or exclude a
genetic relationship.
"Individual"
means a natural person of any age.
"Intended
parent" means an individual, married or unmarried, who manifests an intent
to be legally bound as a parent of a child conceived by assisted reproduction.
"Parent"
means an individual who has established a parent- child relationship
under section -6.
"Parentage"
or "parent-child relationship" means the legal relationship between a
child and a parent of the child.
"Presumed
parent" means an individual who under section -8
is presumed to be a parent of a child unless the presumption is overcome
in a judicial proceeding, a valid denial of parentage is made under part V, or
a court adjudicates the individual to be a parent.
"Signatory"
means an individual who signs a record.
"Transfer"
means a procedure for assisted reproduction by which an embryo or sperm is
placed within the reproductive tract of the individual who will give birth to
the child.
"Witnessed"
means that at least one individual who is authorized to sign and has signed a
record to verify that the individual personally observed a signatory
sign the record.
PART
II. JURISDICTION
§ -3 Jurisdiction; venue. (a) Without limiting the jurisdiction of any other court, the family court has jurisdiction over an action brought under this chapter or chapter 583A. The action may be joined with an action for divorce, annulment, separate maintenance, or support.
(b) An individual who has sexual intercourse, undergoes or consents to assisted reproductive technology, or consents to assisted reproductive technology agreements in the State thereby submits to the jurisdiction of the courts of the State as to an action brought under this chapter with respect to a child who may have been conceived by that act of intercourse or assisted reproductive technology, regardless of where the child is born. In addition to any other method provided by statute, personal jurisdiction may be acquired by personal service outside the State or by service by certified or registered mail, postage prepaid, with return receipt requested.
(c) In addition to any other method of service provided by statute or court rule, if the respondent is not found within the circuit, the court may authorize service by registered or certified mail, with request for a return receipt and direction to deliver to addressee only. The return receipt signed by the respondent shall be prima facie evidence that the respondent accepted delivery of the complaint and summons on the date set forth on the receipt. For service effectuated by registered or certified mail, an electronic copy or facsimile of the signature of the served individual or certified mailers provided by the United States Postal Service shall constitute valid proof of service on the individual. Actual receipt by the respondent of the complaint and summons sent by registered or certified mail shall be the equivalent to personal service on the respondent by an authorized process server as of the date of the receipt.
(d) If it appears to the court that the respondent has refused to accept service by registered or certified mail or is concealing oneself or evading service, or the petitioner does not know the address or residence of the respondent and has not been able to ascertain the same after reasonable and due inquiry and search, the court may authorize notice of the paternity action and the time and date of hearing by publication or by any other manner that is reasonably calculated to give the party actual notice of proceedings and an opportunity to be heard, including the following:
(1) When publication is
authorized:
(A) The summons shall be published once a week for four consecutive weeks in a publication of general circulation in the circuit;
(B) The publication of general circulation shall be designated by the court in the order for publication of the summons;
(C) Notice by publication shall have the same force and effect as such individual having been personally served with the summons; provided that the date of the last publication shall be set no less than twenty-one days prior to the return date stated in the summons; and
(D) Proof of service shall be satisfied by an affidavit or declaration by the authorized representative for the publication that the notice was given in the manner prescribed by the court;
(2) When posting to an online publication website
is authorized, proof of service shall be satisfied by an affidavit or
declaration by the authorized representative for the publication that the
notice was given in the manner prescribed by the court;
(3) When service by electronic mail or posting to
a social networking account is authorized, proof of service shall be satisfied
by an affidavit or declaration by the process server that the notice was given
in the manner prescribed by the court; and
(4) When service is made by posting to a public bulletin board, proof of service shall be satisfied by an affidavit or declaration by the process server that the notice was given in the manner prescribed by the court.
(e) The action may be brought
in the county in which:
(1) The child or any parent is present or domiciled;
(2) The child was born;
(3) Proceedings for probate of the parent's estate have been or could be commenced if a parent is deceased;
(4) Reproductive technology was performed; or
(5) As specified in the choice of law provision of a surrogacy agreement, if any.
§ -4
Parentage determinations from other states
and territories. Parentage
determinations from other states and territories, whether established through
voluntary acknowledgement or through administrative or judicial processes,
shall be treated the same as a parentage adjudication in the State.
§ -5 Who may bring action; when action may be brought; process; warrant; bond. (a) The following may bring an action for the purpose of declaring the existence or nonexistence of a parent and child relationship:
(1) A child or guardian ad
litem of the child;
(2) An individual who is the child's parent under
this chapter;
(3) An individual whose parentage of the child is
to be adjudicated;
(4) A personal representative or parent if the
parent has died, or their personal representative or parent if the individual
who otherwise would be entitled to maintain a proceeding but is deceased; or
(5) The child support enforcement agency.
(b) Actions brought pursuant to this chapter shall be brought in accordance with the following:
(1) If the child is the
subject of an adoption proceeding, action may be brought:
(A) Within
thirty days after the date of the child′s birth in any case when a parent
relinquishes the child for adoption during the thirty-day period; or
(B) At any time prior to the date of execution by a parent of a valid consent to the child's adoption, or prior to placement of the child with adoptive parents;
(2) If the child has not
become the subject of an adoption proceeding, within three years after the
child reaches the age of majority or any time after that for good cause;
provided that any period of time during which the individual whose parentage is
to be adjudicated is absent from the State or is openly cohabitating with a
parent of the child or is contributing to the support of the child, shall not
be computed;
(3) This section shall not extend the time within
which a right of inheritance or a right to a succession may be asserted beyond
the time provided by law relating to distribution and closing of decedents'
estates or to the determination of heirship, or otherwise; and
(4) A personal representative may be appointed by the court upon a filing of an ex parte motion by one of the parties entitled to file a paternity action; provided that probate requirements need not be met; provided further that appointment of the personal representative is limited to representation in proceedings under this chapter.
(c) When an action is brought under
this section, process shall issue in the form of a summons and an order
directed to the individual whose parentage of the child is to be adjudicated,
requiring each to appear and to show cause why the action should not be brought.
If,
at any stage of the proceedings, there appears probable cause to believe that
the individual whose parentage is to be adjudicated will fail to appear in
response thereto, or will flee the jurisdiction of the court, the court may
issue a warrant directed to the sheriff, deputy sheriff, or any police officer
within the circuit, requiring the individual to be arrested and brought for
pre-trial proceedings before the family court. Upon such pre-trial proceedings, the court may
require the individual to enter into bond with good sureties to the State in a
sum to be fixed by the court for each individual's appearance and the trial of
the proceeding in the family court. If
the individual whose parentage is to be adjudicated fails to give the bond
required, the court may commit that individual to the custody of the chief of
police of the county, where that individual shall remain until the individual
enters into the required bond or otherwise is discharged by due process of law.
If the individual whose parentage is to
be adjudicated fails to appear in any proceeding under this chapter, any bond
for that individual's appearance in any proceeding under this chapter shall be
forfeited; provided that the trial of, or other proceedings in, the action,
shall nevertheless proceed as though that individual were present and upon its findings,
the court shall make such orders as it deems proper as though that individual were
present.
In
case of forfeiture of any appearance bond, the money collected upon the forfeiture
shall be applied in payment of the judgment against the individual if they are
adjudicated to be a parent under this chapter.
(d)
Regardless of its terms, an agreement,
other than an agreement approved by the court in accordance with section ‑12(a)(2),
between a parent and the individual whose parentage is to be adjudicated, shall
not bar an action under this section.
(e)
Except as otherwise provided in section -56,
if an action under this section is brought before the birth of the child, all
proceedings shall be stayed until after the birth except service of process and
the taking of depositions to perpetuate testimony.
(f)
Subject to the requirements of section -8(1)(A),
with respect to a child conceived who was not conceived through assisted reproduction,
where a married individual has not had sexual contact with their spouse nor
resided in the same house with the spouse for at least three hundred days prior
to the birth of the child and the spouse cannot be contacted after due
diligence, the court may accept an affidavit by the married individual
attesting to their diligent efforts to contact their spouse and providing clear
and convincing evidence to rebut the presumption of the parentage of the
subject child, and upon the court's satisfaction, notice of the spouse may be
waived and the spouse need not be made a party in the parentage proceedings. The court, after receiving evidence, may also
enter a finding of non-parentage of the spouse.
(g) With respect to a child who was not conceived through assisted reproduction, where a married individual has not had sexual contact with their spouse nor resided in the same house with the spouse for at least three hundred days prior to the birth of the child, and the biological parent is known, parentage in the married spouse may be disestablished by submission of affidavits of both spouses and biological parent that states the name and birthdate of the child and acknowledgement that the spouse is not the parent and that the natural parent should be adjudicated as the legal parent.
PART III. PARENT-CHILD RELATIONSHIP
§ -6 Establishment of parent-child relationship. A parent-child relationship is established between an individual and a child if:
(1) The individual gives birth to the child, except as otherwise provided in part IX;
(2) There is a presumption under
section -8 of the individual's parentage of the child, unless
the presumption is overcome in a judicial proceeding or a valid denial of
parentage is made under part V;
(3) The individual is adjudicated a parent of the
child under part V;
(4) The individual adopts the child;
(5) The individual acknowledges parentage of the child
under part IV, unless the acknowledgment is rescinded under section -11(d)
or successfully challenged under part IV or V;
(6) The individual's parentage of the child is
established under part VIII; or
(7) The individual's parentage is established under part IX.
§ -7
Relationship not dependent on marriage.
A parent-child relationship
extends equally to every child and parent, regardless of the marital status of
the parent.
§ -8
Presumption of parentage. An individual is presumed to be a parent of a child
if:
(1) Except as otherwise provided
under part IX or other State law:
(A) The
individual and the individual who gave birth to the child are
married to each other and the child is born during the marriage, regardless
whether the marriage is or could be declared invalid;
(B) The
individual and the individual who gave birth to the child were married to each
other and the child is born no later than three hundred days after the marriage
is terminated by death, divorce, annulment, or after a decree of separation,
regardless whether the marriage is or could be declared invalid; or
(C) The
individual and the individual who gave birth to the child married each other
after the birth of the child, regardless whether the marriage is or could be
declared invalid; the individual at any time asserted parentage of the child;
and the individual agreed to be and is named as a parent of the child on the
birth certificate of the child;
(2) The individual resided in the
same household with the child prior to the child reaching the age of majority,
including any period of temporary absence, and openly held out the child as the
individual's child;
(3) The individual is deemed a genetic parent
pursuant to section -24; or
(4) If voluntary establishment is completed pursuant to part IV of this chapter.
PART IV. VOLUNTARY ESTABLISHMENT OF PARENTAGE
§ -9
Acknowledgement of parentage. An individual who gave birth
to a child and an alleged genetic parent of the child, intended parent under
part VIII, or presumed parent may sign an acknowledgment of parentage to
establish the parentage of the child.
§ -10
Execution of acknowledgement of parentage.
(a) An acknowledgment of parentage under section -6
shall:
(1) Be in a record signed by the
individual who gave birth to the child and by the individual seeking to
establish a parent-child relationship, and the signatures shall be witnessed or
be attested by a notary public;
(2) State that the child whose parentage is being acknowledged:
(A) Does
not have a presumed parent other than the individual seeking to
establish the parent-child relationship or has a presumed parent whose full
name is stated; and
(B) Does not have another acknowledged parent, adjudicated parent, or individual who is a parent of the child under part VIII or IX other than the individual who gave birth to the child; and
(3) State that the signatories understand that the acknowledgment is the equivalent of and adjudication of parentage of the child and that a challenge to the acknowledgment is permitted only under limited circumstances and is barred two years after the effective date of the acknowledgment.
(b) An acknowledgement of parentage is void if, at the time of signing:
(1) An individual other than the
individual seeking to establish parentage is a presumed parent, unless a denial
of parentage by the presumed parent in a signed record is filed with the department
of health; or
(2) An individual, other than the individual who gave birth to the child or the individual seeking to establish parentage, is an acknowledged or adjudicated parent or a parent under part VIII or IX.
§ -11
Expedited process of parentage. (a) To expedite
the establishment of parentage, each public and private birthing hospital or
center and the department of health shall provide parents the opportunity to
voluntarily acknowledge the parentage of a child during the period immediately
prior to or following the child's birth. The voluntary acknowledgment of parentage
shall be in writing and shall consist of a single form signed under oath by the
individual who gave birth to the child and the individual seeking to establish
a parent-child relationship and signed by a witness. The voluntary acknowledgment of parentage form
shall include the social security number of each signatory. Prior to the signing of the voluntary
acknowledgment of parentage form, designated staff members of such facilities
shall provide to both the individual who gave birth to the child and the other
signatory, if either are present at the facility:
(1) Written materials regarding parentage establishment;
(2) Forms necessary to voluntarily acknowledge parentage; and
(3) Oral, video or audio, and written descriptions of the alternatives to, legal consequences of, and rights and responsibilities of acknowledging parentage, including any right afforded due to minority status if one parent is a minor.
The completed voluntary acknowledgment forms shall clearly identify the name and position of the staff member who provides information to the parents regarding parentage establishment. The provision by designated staff members of the facility of the information required by this section shall not constitute the unauthorized practice of law. Each facility shall send to the department of health the original acknowledgment of parentage containing the social security numbers, if available, of both signatories, with the information required by the department of health so that the birth certificate issued includes the name of signatories, which shall be promptly recorded by the department of health.
(b) The agency shall:
(1) Provide to any individual or facility the necessary:
(A) Materials
and forms and a written description of the rights and
responsibilities related to voluntary acknowledgment of parentage; and
(B) Training,
guidance, and written instructions regarding voluntary acknowledgment of parentage;
(2) Annually assess each facility's parentage establishment program; and
(3) Determine if a voluntary acknowledgment has been filed with the department of health whenever it receives an application for parentage establishment services.
(c) Notwithstanding sections 338-17.7
and 338.18(b), the department of health shall disclose to the agency, upon
request, all voluntary acknowledgment of parentage forms on file with the
department of health.
(d)
The signed voluntary acknowledgment of
parentage shall constitute a legal finding of parentage, subject to the right
of any signatory to rescind the acknowledgment:
(1) Within sixty days of signature; or
(2) Before the date of an administrative or judicial proceeding relating to the child, including a proceeding to establish a support order to which the signatory is a party, whichever is sooner.
(e)
Following the sixty-day period referred
to in subsection (d), a signed voluntary acknowledgment of parentage may be challenged
in court only on the basis of fraud, duress, or material mistake of fact, with
the burden of proof on the challenger. The
legal responsibilities of any signatory arising from the acknowledgment,
including child support obligations, shall not be suspended during the
challenge, except for good cause shown.
(f)
The courts and office of child support
hearings shall give full faith and credit to affidavits for the voluntary
acknowledgment of parentage signed in any other state and these affidavits shall
constitute legal findings of parentage subject to subsections (d) and (e).
(g)
Judicial and administrative proceedings
shall not be required or permitted to ratify an unchallenged acknowledgment of
parentage.
(h)
As used in this section:
"Agency"
means the child support enforcement agency.
"Birthing
center" means any facility outside a hospital that provides
maternity services.
"Facility" means a birthing hospital or a birthing center.
PART V. PROCEEDING TO ADJUDICATE PARENTAGE
§ -12
Pretrial recommendations. (a) On the
basis of the information produced at the pre-trial hearing, the
judge conducting the hearing shall evaluate the probability of determining the
existence or nonexistence of the parent and child relationship in a trial and
whether a judicial declaration of the relationship would be in the best
interest of the child. On the basis of
the evaluation, an appropriate recommendation for settlement shall be made to
the parties, which may include any of the following:
(1) That the action be dismissed
with or without prejudice;
(2) That the matter be compromised by an agreement
among the parent and the individual who is seeking to have their parentage
adjudicated, and the child, in which the individual seeking to be adjudicated
to be a parent is not adjudicated to be a parent but in which a defined economic
obligation is undertaken by the individual whose parentage is to be adjudicated
in favor of the child and, if appropriate, in favor of the parent, subject to
approval by the judge conducting the hearing; provided that, in reviewing the
obligation undertaken by the individual whose parentage is to be adjudicated in
a compromise agreement, the judge conducting the hearing shall consider the
best interest of the child, in light of the factors enumerated in section
576D-7, discounted by the improbability, as it appears to the judge, of
establishing the parentage or nonparentage of the individual whose parentage is
to be adjudicated in a trial of the action; provided further that, in the best
interest of the child, the court may order that the identity of the individual
whose parentage is to be adjudicated be kept confidential, in which case the
court may designate an individual or agency to receive from the individual
whose parentage is to be adjudicated and disburse on behalf of the child all
amounts paid by the individual whose parentage is to be adjudicated in fulfillment
of obligations imposed on the individual; or
(3) That the individual whose parentage is to be adjudicated voluntarily acknowledges their parentage of the child.
(b)
If the parties accept a recommendation
made in accordance with subsection (a), judgment shall be entered accordingly.
(c)
If a party refuses to accept the final
recommendation, the action shall be set for trial.
(d)
The guardian ad litem may accept or
refuse to accept a recommendation under this section.
(e)
The informal hearing may be terminated
and the action set for trial if the judge conducting the hearing finds it
unlikely that all parties would accept a recommendation the judge might make
under subsection (a) or (c).
§ -13
Civil action. (a) An
action under this chapter shall be a civil action governed by the Hawaii rules
of civil procedure or the Hawaii family court rules. The individual who gave birth to the child and
the individual whose parentage is to be adjudicated shall be competent to
testify and may be compelled to testify, provided that no criminal prosecution,
other than a prosecution for perjury, shall afterwards be initiated or pursued
against the individual who gave birth to the child or the individual whose
parentage is to be adjudicated of or on account of any transaction, matter, or
thing concerning which they may testify or produce evidence, documentary or
otherwise. Part VII shall apply in any
action brought under this chapter.
(b)
Testimony relating to sexual access to
the individual who gave birth to the child by an unidentified individual at any
time or by an identified individual at a time other than the probable time of
conception of the child shall be inadmissible in evidence, unless offered by
the individual who gave birth to the child.
(c)
In an action against an individual whose
parentage is to be adjudicated, evidence offered by the individual whose
parentage is to be adjudicated with respect to an individual who is not subject
to the jurisdiction of the court concerning sexual intercourse with the
individual who gave birth to the child at or about the probable time of
conception of the child shall be admissible in evidence only if the individual
has undergone and made available to the court genetic tests, including genetic
tests the results of which do not exclude the possibility of their parentage of
the child.
§ -14
Judgment or order. (a) The
judgment or order of the court determining the existence or nonexistence of the
parent and child relationship shall be determinative for all purposes.
(b)
If the judgment or order of the court is
at variance with the child's birth certificate, the court shall order that a
new birth certificate be issued under section -21.
(c)
The judgment or order may contain any
other provision directed against the appropriate party to the proceeding,
concerning the duty of support, the custody and guardianship of the child, visitation
privileges with the child, the furnishing of bond or other security for the
payment of the judgment, or any other matter in the best interest of the child.
Upon neglect or refusal to give this
security, or upon default of a parent or a parent's surety in compliance with
the terms of the judgment, the court may order the forfeiture of any such
security and the application of the proceeds thereof toward the payment of any
sums due under the terms of the judgment and may also sequester a parent's personal
estate, and the rents and profits of a parent's real estate, and may appoint a
receiver thereof, and may cause a parent's personal estate, including any
salaries, wages, commissions, or other moneys owed to them and the rents and
profits of the parent's real estate, to be applied toward the meeting of the
terms of the judgment, to the extent that the court, from time to time, deems
just and reasonable. The judgment or
order may direct a parent to pay the reasonable expenses of the pregnancy and
confinement, including medical insurance premiums which cover the periods of
pregnancy, childbirth, and confinement. The court may further order the noncustodial
parent to reimburse the custodial parent, the child, or any public agency for
reasonable expenses incurred prior to entry of judgment, including support,
maintenance, education, and funeral expenses expended for the benefit of the
child.
(d)
Support judgment or orders ordinarily
shall be for periodic payments which may vary in amount. In the best interest of the child, a lump sum
payment or the purchase of an annuity may be ordered in lieu of periodic
payments of support. The court may limit
the obligor parent's liability for past support of the child to the proportion
of the expenses already incurred that the court deems just.
(e) In determining the amount to be paid by a
parent for support of the child and the period during which the duty of support
is owed, a court enforcing the obligation of support shall use the
guidelines established under section 576D-7. Provision may be made for the support,
maintenance, and education of an adult or minor child and an incompetent adult
child, whether or not the petition is made before or after the child has
attained the age of majority.
(f)
When a parent of a child is a minor,
unmarried, and not able to provide full support, the court may order one or
both parents of the minor to support the child until the minor reaches the age
of majority, is otherwise emancipated, or is financially able to fully support
the child, whichever occurs first. For this purpose:
(1) The judgment or order for
support shall be made against the parent or parents of the minor to the extent
that the minor is unable to support the child;
(2) The resources, standard of living, and earning
ability of the parent or parents of the minor shall be considered under
subsection (d) in determining the amount of support; and
(3) The parent or parents of the minor shall be an obligor under this chapter and chapter 571 and any action against the obligor to collect support may be pursued against the parent or parents of the minor.
§ -15 Costs. The court may order reasonable fees of counsel, experts, and the child's guardian ad litem, and other costs of the action and pre-trial proceedings, including genetic tests, subject to the provisions of section -36, to be paid by the parties in proportions and at times determined by the court. The court may order the proportionate payment of any indigent party to be paid by the State, or such individual as the court shall direct.
§ -16
Enforcement of judgment or order. (a) If
existence of the parent and child relationship is declared, or parentage or a
duty of support has been acknowledged or adjudicated under this chapter or
under prior law, the obligation of a parent may be enforced in the same or
other proceedings by a parent; the child; the public authority that has
furnished or may furnish the reasonable expenses of pregnancy, confinement,
education, support, or funeral; or by any other individual, including a private
agency, to the extent the individual has furnished or is furnishing these
expenses.
(b) The court may order support payments to be made to a parent, an adult child, the child support enforcement agency, or an individual, corporation, or agency designated to administer them for the benefit of the child under the supervision of the court.
(c)
Willful failure to obey the judgment or
order of the court shall be a civil contempt of the court. All remedies for the enforcement of judgments
shall apply to this chapter. When a
court of competent jurisdiction issues an order compelling a parent to furnish
support, including child support, medical support, or other remedial care, for
the parent's child, it shall constitute prima facie evidence of a civil
contempt of court upon proof that:
(1) The order was made, filed, and
served on the parent or proof that the parent was present in court at the time
the order was pronounced; and
(2) The parent did not comply with the order.
An order of civil contempt of court based on prima facie evidence under this subsection shall clearly state that the failure to comply with the order of civil contempt of court may subject the parent to a penalty that may include imprisonment or, if imprisonment is immediately ordered, the conditions that must be met for release from imprisonment. A party may also prove civil contempt of court by means other than prima facie evidence under this subsection.
§ -17
Modification of judgment or order. (a) The
court shall have continuing jurisdiction to modify or revoke a judgment or order:
(1) For future education and support; and
(2) With respect to matters listed in section -14(c) and (d) and section -16(b), except that a court entering a judgment or order for the payment of a lump sum or the purchase of an annuity under section ‑14(d) may specify that the judgment or order may not be modified or revoked.
(b) In those cases where child
support payments are to continue due to the adult child's pursuance of
education, the child support enforcement agency, three months prior to the
adult child's nineteenth birthday, shall send notice by regular mail to the
adult child and the custodial parent that prospective child support will be
suspended unless proof is provided by the custodial parent or adult child to
the child support enforcement agency, prior to the child's nineteenth birthday,
that the child is presently enrolled as a full-time student in school or has
been accepted into and plans to attend as a full-time student for the next
semester a post-high school university, college, or vocational school. If the custodial parent or adult child fails
to do so, prospective child support payments may be automatically suspended by
the child support enforcement agency, hearings officer, or court upon the child
reaching the age of nineteen years. If
applicable, the agency, hearings officer, or court may issue an order
terminating existing assignments against the responsible parent's income and
income assignment orders.
(c)
The need to provide for the child's health
care needs through health insurance or other means shall be a basis for
petitioning for a modification of the support order.
§ -18
Hearings and records; confidentiality.
(a) Notwithstanding any other law concerning
public hearings and records to the contrary, any hearing or trial held under
this chapter shall be held in closed court without admittance of any individual
other than those individuals necessary to the action or proceeding. All papers and records pertaining to the
action or proceeding, whether part of the permanent record of the court or of a
file in the department of health or elsewhere, shall be subject to inspection
only upon consent of the court and all interested individuals, or in
exceptional cases only upon an order of the court for good cause shown.
(b)
Upon parentage being established, the
confidentiality requirement shall not extend to the judgment and all
subsequently filed documents that are used in good faith for support and
medical expenses, insurance, or enforcement purposes, except that the
confidentiality requirement shall continue to apply to any references to a
non-adjudicated alleged or presumed parent.
(c)
This section shall only apply to cases filed
before January 1, 2021, and parts VIII, IX, and X of this chapter.
§ -19
Court filings; minutes of proceedings; posting
requirement. The judiciary shall
post on its website the titles of all court filings and the minutes of court
proceedings in cases brought under this chapter except for actions filed pursuant
to part VIII or IX; provided that the judiciary shall redact information that
has been made confidential by any statute, rule of court, or court order; provided
further that, on request of a party and for good cause, the court may close a
proceeding and records to the public except that the titles of all court
filings for the case and the contents of a final order shall be available for public
inspection, with other papers and records available for public inspection only
with the consent of the parties or by court order.
§ -20
Promise to render support. (a) Any
promise in writing to furnish support for a child, growing out of a supposed or
alleged parent and child relationship, shall not require consideration and
shall be enforceable according to its terms.
(b)
In the best interest of the child or the
natural parent, the court may, and upon request shall, order the promise to be
kept in confidence and designate an individual or agency to receive and disburse
on behalf of the child all amounts paid in performance of the promise.
§ -21
Birth records. (a) Upon
order of a court of the State or upon request or order of a court of another
state, or following acknowledgment as provided in section -9,
the department of health shall prepare a new certificate of birth consistent
with the findings of the court or in cases of acknowledgment under section -9,
consistent with the acknowledgment, and shall substitute the new certificate
for the original certificate of birth.
(b)
The fact that a parent and child relationship
was declared or acknowledged after the child's birth shall not be ascertainable
from the new certificate but the actual place and date of birth shall be shown.
(c) The evidence upon which the new certificate was made and the original birth certificate shall be kept in a sealed and confidential file and be subject to inspection only upon consent of the court and all interested individuals, or in exceptional cases only upon an order of the court for good cause shown.
§ -22 Parentage judgment; acknowledgement; support order; social security number. The social security number of any individual who is subject to a parentage judgment or acknowledgment, or support order issued under this chapter shall be placed in the records relating to the matter in compliance with any other court rule or law.
§ -23 Filing of acknowledgements and adjudications with the department of health. All voluntary acknowledgments and adjudications of parentage by judicial process shall be filed with the department of health for comparison with information in the state case registry. Filing of the adjudications of parentage shall be the responsibility of the natural parent or such individual or agency as the court shall direct.
PART VI. SPECIAL RULES FOR PROCEEDINGS TO ADJUDICATE PARENTAGE
§ -24
Adjudicating parentage of child with alleged
genetic parent. (a) A proceeding to determine
whether an alleged genetic parent who is not a presumed parent is a parent of a
child may be commenced:
(1) Before the child becomes an adult; or
(2) After the child becomes an adult; provided the child initiates the proceeding.
(b) Except as otherwise provided by
law, this subsection applies in a proceeding described in subsection (a) if the
individual who gave birth to the child is the only other individual with a
claim to parentage of the child. The
court shall adjudicate an alleged genetic parent to be a parent of the child if
the alleged genetic parent:
(1) Is identified under section -36
as a genetic parent of the child and the identification is not successfully
challenged under section -36;
(2) Admits parentage in a pleading, when making an
appearance, or during a hearing, the court accepts the admission, and the court
determines the alleged genetic parent to be a parent of the child;
(3) Declines to submit to genetic testing ordered
by the court or a child support agency, in which case the court may adjudicate
the alleged genetic parent to be a parent of the child even if the alleged
genetic parent denies a genetic relationship with the child;
(4) Is in default after service of process and the
court determines the alleged genetic parent to be a parent of the child; or
(5) Is neither identified nor excluded as a genetic parent by genetic testing and, based on other evidence, the court determines the alleged genetic parent to be a parent of the child.
(c) If in a proceeding involving an alleged genetic parent, at least one other individual in addition to the individual who gave birth to the child has a claim to parentage of the child, the court shall adjudicate parentage under section -30.
§ -25 Adjusting parentage of child with presumed parent. (a) A proceeding to determine whether a presumed parent is a parent of a child may be commenced:
(1) Before the child becomes an adult; or
(2) After the child becomes an adult; provided the child initiates the proceeding.
(b) A presumption of parentage under section -8 cannot be overcome after the child attains two years of age unless the court determines:
(1) The presumed parent is not
a genetic parent, resided with the child, and never held out the child as the
presumed parent's child; or
(2) The child has more than one presumed parent.
(c) Except as otherwise provided by
law, the following rules apply in a proceeding to adjudicate a presumed parent's
parentage of a child if the individual who gave birth to the child is the only
other individual with a claim to parentage of the child:
(1) If no party to the
proceeding challenges the presumed parent's parentage of the child, the court
shall adjudicate the presumed parent to be a parent of the child;
(2) If the presumed parent is identified under
section -36 as a genetic parent of the child and that
identification is not successfully challenged under section -36,
the court shall adjudicate the presumed parent to be a parent of the child; and
(3) If the presumed parent is not identified under section -36 as a genetic parent of the child and the presumed parent or the individual who gave birth to the child challenges the presumed parent's parentage of the child, the court shall adjudicate the parentage of the child in the best interest of the child based on the factors under section -30(a) and (b)
(d) If in a proceeding to
adjudicate a presumed parent's parentage of a child, another individual in
addition to the individual who gave birth to the child asserts a claim to
parentage of the child, the court shall adjudicate parentage under section -30.
§ -26
Adjusting claim of de facto parentage of
child. (a) A proceeding to establish parentage of a child
under this section may be commenced only by an individual who:
(1) Is alive when the proceeding is commenced; and
(2) Claims to be a de facto parent of the child.
(b) An individual who claims to
be a de facto parent of a child must commence a proceeding to establish
parentage of a child under this section:
(1) Before the child attains eighteen years of age; and
(2) While the child is alive.
(c) The following rules govern
standing of an individual who claims to be a de facto parent of a child to
maintain a proceeding under this section:
(1) The individual shall file an
initial verified pleading alleging specific facts that support the claim to
parentage of the child asserted under this section; provided that the verified
pleading shall be served on all parents and legal guardians of the child and
any other party to the proceeding;
(2) An adverse party, parent, or legal guardian may
file a pleading in response to the pleading filed under paragraph (1); provided
that a responsive pleading shall be verified and shall be served on all parties
to the proceeding; and
(3) Unless the court finds a hearing is necessary to determine disputed facts material to the issue of standing, the court shall determine, based on the pleadings under paragraphs (1) and (2), whether the individual has alleged facts sufficient to satisfy by a preponderance of the evidence the requirements of subsection (d)(1) through (7); provided that if the court holds a hearing under this subsection, the hearing shall be held on an expedited basis.
(d) In a proceeding to
adjudicate parentage of an individual who claims to be a de facto parent of the
child, if there is only one other individual who is a parent or has a claim to
parentage of the child, the court shall adjudicate the individual who claims to
be a de facto parent to be a parent of the child if the individual demonstrates
by clear and convincing evidence that:
(1) The individual resided with
the child as a regular member of the child's household for a significant period;
(2) The individual engaged in consistent caretaking
of the child;
(3) The individual undertook full and permanent
responsibilities of a parent of the child without expectation of financial
compensation;
(4) The individual held out the child as the individual's
child;
(5) The individual established a bonded and
dependent relationship with the child which is parental in nature;
(6) Another parent of the child fostered or
supported the bonded and dependent relationship required under paragraph (5);
and
(7) Continuing the relationship between the individual and the child is in the best interest of the child.
(e) Subject to other limitations in
this part, if in a proceeding to adjudicate parentage of an individual who claims
to be a de facto parent of the child, there is more than one other individual
who is a parent or has a claim to parentage of the child and the court
determines that the requirements of subsection (d) are satisfied, the court
shall adjudicate parentage under section -30.
§ -27
Adjudicating parentage of child with acknowledged
parent. (a) If a child has an acknowledged parent, a
proceeding to challenge the acknowledgment of parentage or a denial of
parentage, brought by a signatory to the acknowledgment or denial, shall be
governed by section ‑11(e).
(1) The individual shall commence
the proceeding no later than two years after the effective date of the
acknowledgment;
(2) The court may permit the proceeding only if the
court finds permitting the proceeding is in the best interest of the child; and
(3) If the court permits the proceeding, the court shall adjudicate parentage under section -30.
§ -28
Adjudicating parentage of child with adjudicated
parent. (a) If a child has an
adjudicated parent, a proceeding to challenge the adjudication, brought by an
individual who was a party to the adjudication or received notice under section
-3, shall be governed by the rules governing a collateral
attack on a judgment.
(b)
If a child has an adjudicated parent,
the following rules apply to a proceeding to challenge the adjudication of
parentage brought by an individual, other than the child, who has standing
under section -5 and was not a party to the adjudication and
did not receive notice under section -3:
(1) The individual shall
commence the proceeding no later than two years after the effective date of the
adjudication;
(2) The court may permit the proceeding only if the
court finds permitting the proceeding is in the best interest of the child; and
(3) If the court permits the proceeding, the court shall adjudicate parentage under section -30.
§ -29
Adjudicating parentage of child of assisted
reproduction. (a) An individual who is a
parent under part VIII or the individual who gave birth to the child may bring
a proceeding to adjudicate parentage. If
the court determines the individual is a parent under part VIII, the court
shall adjudicate the individual to be a parent of the child.
(b) In a proceeding to adjudicate an individual's parentage of a child, if another individual other than the individual who gave birth to the child is a parent under part VIII, the court shall adjudicate the individual's parentage of the child under section -30.
§ -30
Adjudicating competing claims of parentage.
(a) Except as otherwise
provided by law, in a proceeding to adjudicate competing claims of parentage of
a child, or challenges under sections -25, -27,
or -28 to parentage of a child, by two or more individuals,
the court shall adjudicate parentage in the best interest of the child, based
on:
(1) The age of the child;
(2) The length of time during which each individual assumed the role of parent of the child;
(3) The nature of the relationship between the child and each individual;
(4) The harm to the child if the relationship between the child and each individual is not recognized;
(5) The basis for each individual's claim to parentage of the child; and
(6) Other equitable factors arising from the disruption of the relationship between the child and each individual or the likelihood of other harm to the child.
(b) If an individual challenges
parentage based on the results of genetic testing, in addition to the factors
listed in subsection (a), the court shall consider:
(1) The facts surrounding the
discovery that the individual might not be a genetic parent of the child; and
(2) The length of time between the time that the individual was placed on notice that the individual might not be a genetic parent and the commencement of the proceeding.
(c) The court may adjudicate a child to have more than two parents under this chapter if the court finds that failure to recognize more than two parents would be detrimental to the child. A finding of detriment to the child shall not require a finding of unfitness of any parent or individual seeking an adjudication of parentage. In determining detriment to the child, the court shall consider all relevant factors, including the harm if the child is removed from a stable placement with an individual who has fulfilled the child's physical needs and psychological needs for care and affection and has assumed the role for a substantial period.
PART VII. GENETIC TESTING
§ -31 Definitions. As used in this part:
"Combined
parentage index" means the product of all tested relationship
indices.
"Hypothesized
genetic relationship" means an asserted genetic relationship between an
individual and a child.
"Probability
of parentage" means, for the ethnic or racial group to which an individual
alleged to be a parent belongs, the probability that a hypothesized genetic
relationship is supported, compared to the probability that a genetic
relationship is supported between the child and a random individual of the
ethnic or racial group used in the hypothesized genetic relationship, expressed
as a percentage incorporating the combined relationship index and a prior
probability.
§ -32
Scope of part; limitation on use of genetic
testing. (a) This part governs genetic testing of an individual
in a proceeding to adjudicate parentage, whether the individual:
(1) Voluntarily submits to testing; or
(2) Is tested pursuant to an order of the court or a child support agency.
(b) Genetic testing may not be used:
(1) To challenge the parentage of
an individual who is a parent under part VIII or IX; or
(2) To establish the parentage of an individual who is a donor.
§ -33 Authority to order or deny genetic testing. (a) Except as otherwise provided in this part or part V, in a proceeding under this chapter to determine parentage, the court shall order the child and any other individual to submit to genetic testing if a request for testing is supported by the sworn statement of a party:
(1) Alleging a reasonable possibility
that the individual is the child's genetic parent; or
(2) Denying genetic parentage of the child and stating facts establishing a reasonable possibility that the individual is not a genetic parent.
(b) A child support agency may
order genetic testing only if there is no presumed, acknowledged, or adjudicated
parent of a child other than the individual who gave birth to the child.
(c)
The court or child support agency may not
order in utero genetic testing.
(d)
If two or more individuals are subject
to court-ordered genetic testing, the court may order that testing be completed
concurrently or sequentially.
(e)
Genetic testing of an individual who
gave birth to a child is not a condition precedent to testing of the child and
an individual whose genetic parentage of the child is being determined. If the individual who gave birth to the child
is unavailable or declines to submit to genetic testing, the court may order
genetic testing of the child and each individual whose genetic parentage of the
child is being adjudicated.
(f)
In a proceeding to adjudicate the
parentage of a child having a presumed parent or an individual who claims to be
a parent under section -26, or to challenge an acknowledgment
of parentage, the court may deny a motion for genetic testing of the child and
any other individual after considering the factors in section -30(a)
and (b).
(g)
If an individual requesting genetic testing
is barred under section -11(e) from establishing the
individual's parentage, the court shall deny the request for genetic testing.
(h)
An order under this section for genetic
testing shall be enforceable by contempt.
§ -34
Requirements for genetic testing. (a) Genetic
testing shall be of a type reasonably relied on by experts in the field of
genetic testing and performed in a testing laboratory accredited by:
(1) The AABB, formerly known as the American Association of Blood Banks, or a successor to its functions; or
(2) An accrediting body designated by the Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human Services.
(b) A specimen used in genetic
testing may consist of a sample or a combination of samples of blood, buccal
cells, bone, hair, or other body tissue or fluid. The specimen used in the testing need not be
of the same kind for each individual undergoing genetic testing.
(c)
If, after recalculation of the
relationship index under section -36(c) using a different
ethnic or racial group, genetic testing does not identify an individual as a
genetic parent of a child, the court may require an individual who has been tested
to submit to additional genetic testing to identify a genetic parent.
§ -35
Report of genetic testing. (a) A
report of genetic testing shall be in a record and signed under penalty of
perjury by a designee of the testing laboratory. A report complying with the requirements of
this part shall be self-authenticating.
(b)
Documentation from a testing laboratory
of the following information shall be sufficient to establish a reliable chain
of custody and allow the results of genetic testing to be admissible without
testimony:
(1) The name and photograph of
each individual whose specimen has been taken;
(2) The name of the individual who collected each
specimen;
(3) The place and date each specimen was collected;
(4) The name of the individual who received each
specimen in the testing laboratory; and
(5) The date each specimen was received.
§ -36
Genetic testing results; challenge to results.
(a) Subject to a challenge
under subsection (b), an individual shall be identified under this chapter as a
genetic parent of a child if genetic testing complies with this part and the results
of the testing disclose:
(1) The individual has at
least a ninety-nine per cent probability of parentage, using a prior
probability of 0.50, as calculated by using the combined relationship index
obtained in the testing; and
(2) A combined percentage index of at least one hundred to one.
(b) An individual identified
under subsection (a) as a genetic parent of the child may challenge the genetic
testing results only by other genetic testing satisfying the requirements of
this part that:
(1) Excludes the individual as a genetic parent of the child; or
(2) Identifies another individual
as a possible genetic parent of the child other than:
(A) The individual who gave birth to the child; or
(B) The individual identified under subsection (a).
(c) If more than one individual
other than the individual who gave birth is identified by genetic testing as a
possible genetic parent of the child, the court shall order each individual to
submit to further genetic testing to identify a genetic parent.
§ -37 Genetic testing when specimen not available. (a) Subject to subsection (b), if a genetic-testing specimen is not available from an alleged genetic parent of a child, an individual seeking genetic testing demonstrates good cause, and the court finds that the circumstances are just, the court may order any of the following individuals to submit specimens for genetic testing:
(1) A parent of the alleged genetic parent;
(2) A sibling of the alleged genetic parent;
(3) Another child of the alleged genetic
parent and the individual who gave birth to the other child; and
(4) Another relative of the alleged genetic parent necessary to complete genetic testing.
(b) The court shall only issue an order under this
section if the court finds that a need for genetic testing
outweighs the legitimate interests of the individual sought to be tested.
§ -38
Deceased individual. If an individual seeking genetic testing
demonstrates good cause, the court may order genetic testing of a deceased
individual.
PART
VIII. ASSISTED REPRODUCTION
§ -39
Scope of part. This part shall not apply to
the birth of a child conceived by sexual intercourse or assisted reproduction
under a surrogacy agreement under part IX.
§ -40
Parental status of donor. A donor shall not be a parent of a child
conceived by assisted reproduction. This
section shall apply whether the donor is known or anonymous, related or
unrelated to the intended parents, or compensated or uncompensated.
§ -41
Parentage of child of assisted reproduction.
An individual who consents under section
-42 to assisted reproduction by an individual with the intent
to be a parent of a child conceived by the assisted reproduction shall be a
parent of the child.
§ -42
Consent to assisted reproduction. (a) Except
as otherwise provided in subsection (b), the consent described in section -41
shall be in a record signed by an individual giving birth to a child conceived
by assisted reproduction and an individual who intends to be a parent of the
child.
(b)
Failure to consent in a record as
required by subsection (a), before, on, or after the birth of the child, shall not
preclude the court from finding consent to parentage if:
(1) The individual giving birth to
a child or the individual proves by clear and convincing evidence the existence
of an express agreement entered into before conception that the individual and
the natural parent intended they both would be parents of the child; or
(2) The individual giving birth to the child and the individual for the first two years of the child's life, including any period of temporary absence, resided together in the same household with the child and both openly held out the child as the individual's child, unless the individual dies or becomes incapacitated before the child attains two years of age or the child dies before the child attains two years of age, in which case the court may find consent under this subsection to parentage if a party proves by clear and convincing evidence that the individual giving birth to the child and the individual intended to reside together in the same household with the child and both intended the individual would openly hold out the child as the individual's child, but the individual was prevented from carrying out that intent by death or incapacity.
§ -43 Limitation on spouse's dispute of parentage. (a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection (b), an individual who, at the time of a child's birth, is the spouse of the individual who gave birth to the child by assisted reproduction may not challenge the individual's parentage of the child unless:
(1) No later than two years after
the birth of the child or the date as of which the individual first learns of the
birth of the child, whichever is later, the individual commences a proceeding
to adjudicate the individual's parentage of the child; and
(2) The court finds the individual did not consent to the assisted reproduction, before, on, or after the birth of the child, or withdrew consent under section ‑45.
(b) A proceeding to adjudicate
a spouse's parentage of a child born by assisted reproduction may be commenced
at any time if the court determines:
(1) The spouse neither
provided a gamete for, nor consented to, the assisted reproduction;
(2) The spouse and the individual who gave birth
to the child have not cohabited since the probable time of assisted
reproduction; and
(3) The spouse never openly held out the child as the spouse's child.
(c) This section applies to a spouse's dispute of parentage even if the spouse's marriage is declared invalid after assisted reproduction occurs.
§ -44 Effect of certain legal proceedings regarding marriage. If a marriage of an individual who gives birth to a child conceived by assisted reproduction is terminated through divorce or dissolution, subject to legal separation or separate maintenance, declared invalid, or annulled before transfer of gametes or embryos to the individual, a former spouse of the individual shall not be a parent of the child unless the former spouse consented in a record that the former spouse would be a parent of the child if assisted reproduction were to occur after a divorce, dissolution, annulment, declaration of invalidity, legal separation, or separate maintenance, and the former spouse did not withdraw consent under section -45.
§ -45 Withdrawal of consent. (a) An individual who consents under section -42 to assisted reproduction may withdraw consent any time before a transfer that results in a pregnancy, by giving notice in a record of the withdrawal of consent to the individual who agreed to give birth to a child conceived by assisted reproduction and to any clinic or health-care provider facilitating the assisted reproduction. Failure to give notice to the clinic or health-care provider shall not affect a determination of parentage under this part.
(b) An individual who
withdraws consent under subsection (a) shall not be a parent of the child under
this part.
§ -46
Parental status of deceased individuals.
(a) If an individual who intends to be a parent of
a child conceived by assisted reproduction dies during the period between the
transfer of a gamete or embryo and the birth of the child, the individual's
death shall not preclude the establishment of the individual's parentage of the
child if the individual otherwise would be a parent of the child under this
chapter.
(b) If an individual who consented in a record to assisted reproduction by an individual who agreed to give birth to a child dies before a transfer of gametes or embryos, the deceased individual shall be a parent of a child conceived by the assisted reproduction only if:
(1) Either:
(A) The
individual consented in a record that if assisted reproduction were to occur
after the death of the individual, the individual would be a parent of the
child; or
(B) The individual's intent to be a parent of a child conceived by assisted reproduction after the individual's death is established by clear-and-convincing evidence; and
(2) Either:
(A) The
embryo is in utero no later than thirty-six months after the individual's
death; or
(B) The child is born no later than forty-five months after the individual's death.
PART
IX. SURROGACY AGREEMENT
§ -47
Definitions. As used in this part:
"Genetic surrogate" means an individual who is capable of carrying a pregnancy to term and giving birth to a child, who is not an intended parent and who agrees to become pregnant through assisted reproduction using their own gamete, under a genetic surrogacy agreement as provided in this part.
"Gestational surrogate" means an individual who is capable of carrying a pregnancy to term and giving birth to a child, who is not an intended parent and who agrees to become pregnant through assisted reproduction using gametes that are not their own, under a gestational surrogacy agreement as provided in this part.
§ -48
Eligibility to enter gestational or genetic
surrogacy agreement. (a) To execute an agreement to act as a
gestational or genetic surrogate, an individual who is capable of carrying a
pregnancy to term and giving birth to a child shall:
(1) Have attained twenty-one years of age;
(2) Previously have given birth to at least one child;
(3) Complete a medical evaluation related to the surrogacy arrangement by a licensed medical doctor;
(4) Complete a mental health consultation by a licensed mental health professional; and
(5) Have independent legal representation of their choice throughout the surrogacy arrangement regarding the terms of the surrogacy agreement and the potential legal consequences of the agreement.
(b) To execute a surrogacy agreement, each intended parent, whether or not genetically related to the child, shall:
(1) Have attained twenty-one
years of age;
(2) Complete a mental health consultation by a licensed
mental health professional; and
(3) Have independent legal representation of the intended parent's or parents' choice throughout the surrogacy arrangement regarding the terms of the surrogacy agreement and the potential legal consequences of the agreement.
§ -49 Requirements of gestational or genetic surrogacy agreement; process. A surrogacy agreement shall be executed in compliance with the following rules:
(1) At least one party shall
be a resident of the State or, if no party is a resident of the State, at least
one medical evaluation or procedure or mental health consultation under the
agreement shall occur in the State;
(2) A surrogate and each intended parent shall
meet the requirements of section -48;
(3) Each intended parent, the surrogate, and the
surrogate's spouse, if any, shall be parties to the agreement;
(4) The agreement shall be in a record signed by
each party listed in paragraph (3);
(5) The surrogate and each intended parent shall
acknowledge in a record receipt of a copy of the agreement;
(6) The signature of each party to the agreement
shall be attested by a notary public or witnessed in accordance with the laws
of the jurisdiction in which the agreement is signed;
(7) The surrogate; surrogate's spouse, if any; and
the intended parent or parents shall have independent legal representation
throughout the surrogacy arrangement regarding the terms of the surrogacy
agreement and the potential legal consequences of the agreement, and each
counsel shall be identified in the surrogacy agreement;
(8) The intended parent or parents shall pay for
independent legal representation for the surrogate and surrogate's spouse, if
any; and
(9) The agreement shall be executed before a medical procedure, including the taking of medication, occurs related to the surrogacy agreement, other than the medical evaluation and mental health consultation required by section -48.
§ -50
Requirements of
gestational or genetic surrogacy agreement. (a) A
surrogacy agreement shall comply with the following requirements:
(1) A surrogate agrees to
attempt to become pregnant by means of assisted reproduction;
(2) Except as otherwise provided in sections -56,
‑59, and -60, the surrogate and the
surrogate's spouse or former spouse, if any, have no claim to parentage of a
child conceived by assisted reproduction under the agreement;
(3) The surrogate's spouse, if any, shall
acknowledge and agree to comply with the obligations imposed on the surrogate
by the agreement;
(4) Except as otherwise provided in sections -56,
‑59, and -60, the intended parent or
parents, each one jointly and severally, immediately upon birth will be the
exclusive parent or parents of the child, regardless of the number of children
born or the gender or mental or physical condition of each child;
(5) Except as otherwise provided in sections -56,
‑59, and -60, the intended parent or
parents, each parent jointly and severally, immediately upon birth will assume
physical and legal custody of, and responsibility for the financial support of
the child, regardless of the number of children born or the gender or mental or
physical condition of each child;
(6) The agreement shall include information
disclosing how each intended parent will cover the surrogacy-related
compensation and expenses of the surrogate and the medical expenses of the
child or children, including whether a bond or escrow account shall be required
of each intended parent; provided that if health care coverage is used to cover
the medical expenses, the disclosure shall include a summary of the health care
policy provisions related to coverage for surrogate pregnancy, including any
possible liability of the surrogate; third-party liability liens; other
insurance coverage; and any notice requirement that could affect coverage or
liability of the surrogate; provided further that, unless the agreement
expressly provides otherwise, the review and disclosure shall not constitute
legal advice; provided further that if the extent of coverage is uncertain, a
statement of that fact shall be sufficient to comply with this paragraph;
(7) The agreement shall permit the surrogate to make
all health and welfare decisions regarding themselves and their pregnancy, but
may include agreed-to health-related commitments; provided that this chapter shall
not enlarge or diminish the surrogate's constitutional right to terminate the
pregnancy;
(8) The agreement shall include information about
each party's right under this part to terminate the surrogacy agreement; and
(9) The agreement shall contain a confidentiality agreement.
(b) A surrogacy agreement may provided for:
(1) Payment of consideration
to, and payment or reimbursement of reasonable expenses to, the surrogate; and
(2) Reimbursement of specific expenses if the agreement is terminated under this part.
(c) A right created under a
surrogacy agreement shall not be assignable and there shall be no third-party
beneficiary of the agreement other than the child.
§ -51
Surrogacy agreement; effect of
subsequent change of marital status. (a)
Unless a surrogacy agreement expressly
provides otherwise:
(1) The marriage of a
surrogate after the agreement is signed by all parties shall not affect the
validity of the agreement, their spouse's consent to the agreement shall not be
required, and their spouse shall not be a presumed parent of a child conceived
by assisted reproduction under the agreement; and
(2) The divorce, dissolution, annulment, declaration of invalidity, or legal separation of the surrogate after the agreement is signed by all parties shall not affect the validity of the agreement.
(b) Unless a surrogacy agreement expressly provides otherwise:
(1) The marriage of an
intended parent after the agreement is signed by all parties shall not affect
the validity of a surrogacy agreement, the consent of the spouse of the
intended parent shall not be required, and the spouse of the intended parent shall
not, based on the agreement, be a parent of a child conceived by assisted reproduction
under the agreement; and
(2) The divorce, dissolution, annulment, declaration of invalidity, or legal separation of an intended parent after the agreement is signed by all parties shall not affect the validity of the agreement and, except as otherwise provided in section -59, the intended parents shall be the parents of the child.
§ -52
Exclusive, continuing jurisdiction. During the period after the
execution of a surrogacy agreement until ninety days after the birth of a child
conceived by assisted reproduction under the agreement, a court of the State
conducting a proceeding under this chapter has exclusive, continuing
jurisdiction over all matters arising out of the agreement. This section shall not give the court
jurisdiction over a child custody or child support proceeding if jurisdiction
is not authorized by law other than this chapter.
§ -53
Termination of gestational surrogacy agreement.
(a) A party to a gestational surrogacy agreement
may terminate the agreement, at any time before an embryo transfer, by giving
notice of termination in a record to all other parties. If an embryo transfer
does not result in a pregnancy, a party may terminate the agreement at any time
before a subsequent embryo transfer.
(b) Unless a gestational surrogacy agreement provides otherwise, on termination of the agreement under subsection (a), the parties are released from the agreement, except that each intended parent remains responsible for expenses that are reimbursable under the agreement and incurred by the gestational surrogate through the date of termination.
(c) Except in a case involving fraud,
neither a gestational surrogate nor the surrogate's spouse or former spouse, if
any, shall be liable to the intended parent or parents for a penalty or liquidated
damages, for terminating a gestational surrogacy agreement under this section.
§ -54
Parentage under gestational surrogacy agreement.
(a) Except as otherwise provided in subsection
(c), section -55(b), or section -57, upon
birth of a child conceived by assisted reproduction under a gestational
surrogacy agreement, each intended parent shall be, by operation of law, a
parent of the child.
(b)
Except as otherwise provided in
subsection (c) or section -57, neither a gestational surrogate
nor the surrogate's spouse or former spouse, if any, shall be a parent of the
child.
(c)
If a child is alleged to be a genetic
child of the surrogate, the court shall order genetic testing of the child. If
the child is a genetic child of the individual who agreed to be a gestational
surrogate, parentage shall be determined based on parts I through VII.
(d)
Except as otherwise provided in
subsection (c), section -55(b), or section -57,
if, due to a clinical or laboratory error, a child conceived by assisted
reproduction under a gestational surrogacy agreement is not genetically related
to either intended parent or to a donor who donated gametes to the intended
parent or parents, each intended parent, and not the gestational surrogate and
the surrogate's spouse or former spouse, if any, shall be a parent of the
child, subject to any other claim of parentage.
§ -55
Gestational surrogacy agreement;
parentage of deceased intended parent. (a)
Section -54 applies to
an intended parent even if the intended parent dies during the period between
the transfer of a gamete or embryo and the birth of the child.
(b)
Except as otherwise provided in section -57,
an intended parent shall not be a parent of a child conceived by assisted
reproduction under a gestational surrogacy agreement if the intended parent
dies before the transfer of a gamete or embryo unless:
(1) The agreement provides otherwise; and
(2) The transfer of a gamete or embryo occurs no later than thirty-six months after the death of the intended parent or the birth of the child occurs no later than forty-five months after the death of the intended parent.
§ -56
Gestational
surrogacy agreement; order of parentage. (a) Except as otherwise provided in section ‑54(c)
or -57, before, on, or after the birth of a child conceived
by assisted reproduction under a gestational surrogacy agreement, a party to
the agreement may commence a proceeding in the appropriate court for an order
or judgment:
(1) Declaring that each
intended parent is a parent of the child and ordering that parental rights and
duties vest immediately upon the birth of the child exclusively in each
intended parent;
(2) Declaring that the gestational surrogate and
the surrogate's spouse or former spouse, if any, are not the parents of the
child;
(3) Designating the content of the birth record in
accordance with chapter 338 and directing the department of health to designate
each intended parent as a parent of the child;
(4) To protect the privacy of the child and the parties,
declaring that the court record is not open to inspection;
(5) If necessary, that the child be surrendered to
the intended parent or parents; and
(6) For other relief the court determines necessary and proper.
(b) The court may issue an order
or judgment under subsection (a) before the birth of the child. The court shall stay enforcement of the order
or judgment until the birth of the child.
(c)
Neither the State nor the department of
health shall be a necessary party to a proceeding under subsection (a).
§ -57
Effect of gestational surrogacy
agreement. (a) A gestational surrogacy agreement that
complies with sections ‑48, -49, and -50
shall be enforceable.
(b)
If a child was conceived by assisted
reproduction under a gestational surrogacy agreement that does not comply with
sections -48, -49, and -50,
the court shall determine the rights and duties of the parties to the agreement
consistent with the intent of the parties at the time of execution of the
agreement. Each party to the agreement
and any individual who at the time of the execution of the agreement was a
spouse of a party to the agreement has standing to maintain a proceeding to
adjudicate an issue related to the enforcement of the agreement.
(c)
Except as expressly provided in a
gestational surrogacy agreement or subsection (d) or (e), if the agreement is
breached by the gestational surrogate or one or more intended parents, the
non-breaching party shall be entitled to all remedies available at law or in equity.
(d)
Specific performance shall not be a
remedy available for breach by a gestational surrogate of a provision in the
agreement that the gestational surrogate undergo an embryo transfer, terminate
or not terminate a pregnancy, or submit to medical procedures.
(e)
Except as otherwise provided in
subsection (d), if an intended parent is determined to be a parent of the
child, specific performance shall be a remedy available for:
(1) Breach of the agreement by
a gestational surrogate or gestational surrogate's spouse which prevents the
intended parent from exercising immediately on the birth of the child the full
rights of parentage; or
(2) Breach by the intended parent which prevents the intended parent's acceptance, immediately upon the birth of the child conceived by assisted reproduction under the agreement, of the duties of parentage.
§ -58
Requirements to validate genetic surrogacy
agreement. (a) Except as otherwise
provided in section -60, to be enforceable, a genetic
surrogacy agreement shall be validated by the family court. A proceeding to validate the agreement shall
be commenced before assisted reproduction related to the surrogacy agreement.
(b)
The court shall issue an order
validating a genetic surrogacy agreement if the court finds that:
(1) Sections -48,
-49, and -50 are satisfied; and
(2) All parties entered into the agreement voluntarily and understand its terms.
(c) An individual who terminates a genetic surrogacy agreement pursuant to section -59 shall file notice of the termination with the court. On receipt of the notice, the court shall vacate any order issued under subsection (b). An individual who fails to notify the court of the termination of the agreement shall be subject to sanctions as ordered by the court.
§ -59
Termination of genetic surrogacy agreement.
(a) A party to a genetic
surrogacy agreement may terminate the agreement as follows:
(1) An intended parent who is
a party to the agreement may terminate the agreement at any time before a
gamete or embryo transfer by giving notice of termination in a record to all
other parties; provided that if a gamete or embryo transfer does not result in
a pregnancy, a party may terminate the agreement at any time before a
subsequent gamete or embryo transfer; provided further that the notice of
termination shall be attested by a notary public or witnessed; and
(2) A genetic surrogate who is a party to the agreement may withdraw consent to the agreement any time before seventy-two hours after the birth of a child conceived by assisted reproduction under the agreement; provided that to withdraw consent, the genetic surrogate shall execute a notice of termination in a record stating the surrogate's intent to terminate the agreement; provided further that the notice of termination shall be attested by a notary public or witnessed and be delivered to each intended parent any time within seventy-two hours after the birth of the child.
(b) On termination of the genetic surrogacy agreement under subsection (a), the parties shall be released from all obligations under the agreement except that each intended parent shall remain responsible for all expenses incurred by the surrogate through the date of termination which are reimbursable under the agreement. Unless the agreement provides otherwise, the surrogate shall not be entitled to and shall refund to the intended parents within ten days after withdrawal of consent, any non-expense related compensation paid for serving as a surrogate.
(c) Except in a case involving
fraud, neither a genetic surrogate nor the surrogate's spouse or former spouse,
if any, shall be liable to the intended parent or parents for a penalty or
liquidated damages, for terminating a genetic surrogacy agreement under this
section.
§ -60
Parentage under validated genetic surrogacy
agreement. (a) Unless a genetic surrogate exercises the right
under section -59 to terminate a genetic surrogacy agreement,
each intended parent shall be a parent of a child conceived by assisted reproduction
under an agreement validated under section -58.
(b)
Unless a genetic surrogate exercises the
right under section -59 to terminate the genetic surrogacy
agreement, on proof of a court order issued under section -58
validating the agreement, the court shall make an order:
(1) Declaring that each
intended parent is a parent of a child conceived by assisted reproduction under
the agreement and ordering that parental rights and duties vest exclusively in
each intended parent;
(2) Declaring that the gestational surrogate and
the surrogate's spouse or former spouse, if any, are not parents of the child;
(3) Designating the contents of the birth
certificate in accordance with chapter 338 and directing the department of
health to designate each intended parent as a parent of the child;
(4) To protect the privacy of the child and the
parties, declaring that the court record is not open to inspection including
captions of filings;
(5) If necessary, that the child be surrendered to
the intended parent or parents; and
(6) For other relief the court determines necessary and proper.
(c)
If a genetic surrogate terminates a
genetic surrogacy agreement pursuant to section -59(a)(2),
parentage of the child conceived by assisted reproduction under the agreement
shall be determined under parts I through VII.
(d)
If a child born to a genetic surrogate
is alleged not to have been conceived by assisted reproduction, the court shall
order genetic testing to determine the genetic parentage of the child. If the child was not conceived by assisted
reproduction, parentage shall be determined under parts I through VII. Unless the genetic surrogacy agreement
provides otherwise, if the child was not conceived by assisted reproduction,
the surrogate shall not be entitled to any non-expense related compensation
paid for serving as a surrogate.
(e)
Unless a genetic surrogate exercises the
right under section -59 to terminate the genetic surrogacy
agreement, if an intended parent fails to file notice required under section -59(a),
the genetic surrogate or the department of health may file with the court, no
later than sixty days after the birth of a child conceived by assisted
reproduction under the agreement, notice that the child has been born to the genetic
surrogate. Unless the genetic surrogate
has properly exercised the right under section -59 to
withdraw consent to the agreement, on proof of a court order issued under
section -58 validating the agreement, the court shall order
that each intended parent is a parent of the child.
§ -61
Effect of nonvalidated genetic surrogacy
agreement. (a) A genetic surrogacy agreement, whether or not
in a record, that is not validated under section -58 shall be
enforceable only to the extent provided in this section and section -63.
(b)
If all parties agree, a court may validate
a genetic surrogacy agreement after assisted reproduction has occurred but
before the birth of a child conceived by assisted reproduction under the
agreement.
(c)
If a child conceived by assisted reproduction
under a genetic surrogacy agreement that is not validated under section -58
is born and the genetic surrogate, consistent with section -59(a)(2),
withdraws their consent to the agreement before seventy-two hours after the
birth of the child, the court shall adjudicate the parentage of the child under
part I or VII.
(d)
If a child conceived by assisted
reproduction under a genetic surrogacy agreement that is not validated under
section -57 is born and a genetic surrogate does not withdraw
their consent to the agreement, consistent with section -59(a)(2),
before seventy-two hours after the birth of the child, the genetic surrogate shall
not automatically be a parent and the court shall adjudicate parentage of the
child based on the best interest of the child, taking into account the factors
in section -56(a) and the intent of the parties at the time
of the execution of the agreement.
(e)
The parties to a genetic surrogacy
agreement shall have standing to maintain a proceeding to adjudicate parentage
under this section.
§ -62
Genetic surrogacy agreement; parentage
of deceased intended parent. (a) Except as otherwise provided in section -60
or -61, upon birth of a child conceived by assisted reproduction
under a genetic surrogacy agreement, each intended parent shall be, by
operation of law, a parent of the child, notwithstanding the death of an
intended parent during the period between the transfer of a gamete or embryo
and the birth of the child.
(b)
Except as otherwise provided in section -60
or ‑61, an intended parent shall not be a parent of a
child conceived by assisted reproduction under a genetic surrogacy agreement if
the intended parent dies before the transfer of a gamete or embryo unless:
(1) The agreement provides otherwise; and
(2) The transfer of the gamete or embryo occurs no later than thirty-six months after the death of the intended parent, or the birth of the child occurs no later than forty-five months after the death of the intended parent.
§ -63
Breach of genetic surrogacy agreement.
(a) Subject to section -59(b), if
a genetic surrogacy agreement is breached by a genetic surrogate or one or more
intended parents, the non-breaching party shall be entitled to all remedies
available at law or in equity.
(b)
Specific performance shall not be a
remedy available for breach by a genetic surrogate of a requirement of a
validated or non-validated genetic surrogacy agreement that the surrogate
undergo insemination or embryo transfer, terminate or not terminate a
pregnancy, or submit to medical procedures.
(c)
Except as otherwise provided in subsection
(b), specific performance shall be a remedy available for:
(1) Breach of a validated
genetic surrogacy agreement by a genetic surrogate of a requirement which
prevents an intended parent from exercising the full rights of parentage
seventy-two hours after the birth of the child; or
(2) Breach by an intended parent which prevents the intended parent's acceptance of duties of parentage seventy-two hours after the birth of the child.
PART
X. INFORMATION ABOUT DONOR
§ -64 Definitions. As used in this part:
"Identifying information" means:
(1) The full name of a donor;
(2) The date of birth of a donor; and
(3) The permanent and, if different, current address of the donor at the time of the donation.
"Medical history" means information regarding any:
(1) Present illness of a donor;
(2) Past illness of the donor; and
(3) Social, genetic, and family history pertaining to the health of the donor.
§ -65 Applicability. This part applies only to gametes collected on or after the effective date of this chapter.
§ -66
Collection of information. (a) A
gamete bank or fertility clinic licensed in the State shall collect from a donor
the donor's identifying information and medical history at the time of the
donation.
(b)
A gamete bank or fertility clinic
licensed in the State which receives gametes of a donor collected by another
gamete bank or fertility clinic shall collect the name, address, telephone
number, and electronic mail address of the gamete bank or fertility clinic from
which it received the gametes.
(c) A gamete bank or fertility clinic licensed in the State shall disclose the information collected under subsections (a) and (b) as provided under section -67.
§ -67
Declaration regarding identity disclosure.
(a) A gamete bank or fertility
clinic licensed in the State that collects gametes from a donor shall:
(1) Provide the donor with information in a record about the donor's choice regarding identity disclosure; and
(2) Obtain a declaration from the donor regarding identity disclosure.
(b) A gamete bank or fertility
clinic licensed in the State shall give a donor the choice to sign a declaration,
attested by a notary public or witnessed, that either:
(1) States that the donor
agrees to disclose the donor's identity to a child conceived by assisted
reproduction with the donor's gametes on request once the child attains
eighteen years of age; or
(2) States that the donor does not agree presently to disclose the donor's identity to the child.
(c) A gamete bank or fertility clinic licensed in the State shall permit a donor who has signed a declaration under subsection (b)(2) to withdraw the declaration at any time by signing a declaration under subsection (b)(1).
§ -68
Disclosure of identifying information and
medical history. (a) On request of a child
conceived by assisted reproduction who attains eighteen years of age, a gamete bank
or fertility clinic licensed in the State that collected the gametes used in
the assisted reproduction shall make a good faith effort to provide the child
with identifying information of the donor who provided the gametes, unless the
donor signed and did not withdraw a declaration under section -67(b)(2).
If the donor signed and did not withdraw
the declaration, the gamete bank or fertility clinic shall make a good faith
effort to notify the donor, who may elect under section -67(c)
to withdraw the donor's declaration.
(b)
Regardless of whether a donor signed a
declaration under section -67(b)(2), on request by a child conceived
by assisted reproduction who attains eighteen years of age, or, if the child is
a minor, by a parent or guardian of the child, a gamete bank or fertility
clinic licensed in the State that collected the gametes used in the assisted
reproduction shall make a good faith effort to provide the child or, if the
child is a minor, the parent or guardian of the child, access to non-identifying
medical history of the donor.
(c) On request of a child conceived by assisted reproduction who attains eighteen years of age, a gamete bank or fertility clinic licensed in the State that received the gametes used in the assisted reproduction from another gamete bank or fertility clinic shall disclose the name, address, telephone number, and electronic mail address of the gamete bank or fertility clinic from which it received the gametes.
§ -69
Recordkeeping. (a) A
gamete bank or fertility clinic licensed in the State that collects gametes for
use in assisted reproduction shall maintain identifying information and medical
history about each gamete donor. The
gamete bank or fertility clinic shall maintain records of gamete screening and
testing and comply with reporting requirements, in accordance with federal law
and any other applicable law of the State.
(b) A gamete bank or fertility clinic licensed in the State that receives gametes from another gamete bank or fertility clinic shall maintain the name, address, telephone number, and electronic mail address of the gamete bank or fertility clinic from which it received the gametes.
§ -70 Storage of gametes. A gamete bank or fertility clinic may deem gametes abandoned upon the storage fee not being paid by the owner or owners of the gametes for a period of six months. The gamete bank or fertility clinic shall send a written correspondence to the last known address of the owner or owners upon the expiration of the six-month failure-to-pay period. If the owner or owners do not respond to the correspondence within thirty days of the correspondence being transmitted, the gametes shall be destroyed in a manner agreed to by the owner or owners in the original contractual agreement. The owner or owners have an affirmative duty to update the gamete bank or fertility clinic if their address changes.
PART XI. OTHERS
§ -71
Uniformity of application and construction.
This chapter shall
be applied and construed to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform the
law with respect to the subject of this chapter among states enacting it."
SECTION 3. Section 26-14.6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (f) to read as follows:
"(f) Effective July 1, 1990, the functions,
authority, and obligations, together with the limitations imposed thereon and
the privileges and immunities conferred thereby, exercised by a "sheriff",
"sheriffs", a "sheriff's deputy", "sheriff's deputies",
a "deputy sheriff", "deputy sheriffs", or a "deputy",
under sections 21-8, 47-18, 105-4, 134-51, 183D-11, 187A-14, 231-25, 281-108,
281-111, 286-52, 286-52.5, 321-1, 322-6, 325-9, 353-11, 356D-54, 356D-94,
383-71, 438-5, 445-37, 482E-4, 485A-202, 501-42, 501-171, 501-218, 521-78,
578-4, [584-6,] 587-33, 603-29, 604-6.2, 606-14, 607-2, 607-4, 607-8,
633-8, 634-11, 634-12, 634-21, 634-22, 651-33, 651-37, 651-51, 654-2, 655-2,
657-13, 660-16, 666-11, 666-21, 803-23, 803-34, 803-35, 804-14, 804-18, 804-41,
805-1, 806-71, and 832-23 shall be exercised to the same extent by the
department of public safety."
SECTION 4. Section 338-12, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§338-12 Evidentiary character of certificates. Certificates filed within thirty days after the time prescribed therefor shall be prima facie evidence of the facts therein stated. Data pertaining to the father of a child is prima facie evidence if:
(1) The alleged [father] parent is:
(A) The [husband] spouse of the [mother;]
other parent; or
(B) The acknowledged [father] parent
of the child; or
(2) The [father] parent and child
relationship has been established under chapter [584.] . Data pertaining to the alleged [father]
parent acknowledging [paternity] parentage of the child is
admissible as evidence of [paternity] parentage in any family
court proceeding, including proceedings under chapter [584.] ."
SECTION 5. Section 338-15, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§338-15
Late or altered certificates. A person born in the State may file or amend a
certificate after the time prescribed, upon submitting proof as required by
rules adopted by the department of health. Certificates registered after the time
prescribed for filing by the rules of the department of health shall be registered
subject to any evidentiary requirements that the department adopts by rule to
substantiate the alleged facts of birth.
The department may amend a birth certificate to change or establish the
identity of a registrant's parent only pursuant to a court order from a court
of appropriate jurisdiction or pursuant to a legal establishment of parenthood
pursuant to chapter [584.] . Amendments that change or establish the
identity of a registrant's parent that are made in accordance with this section
shall not be considered corrections of personal records pursuant to chapter
92F."
SECTION 6. Section 338-21, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows:
1. By amending subsection (a) to read:
"(a) All children born to parents not married to
each other, irrespective of the marriage of either natural parent to another,
(1) on the marriage of the natural parents with each other, (2) on the
voluntary, written acknowledgments of [paternity] parentage under
oath signed by the natural father and the natural mother, or (3) on
establishment of the parent and child relationship under chapter [584,] ,
are entitled to the same rights as those born to parents married to each other
and shall take the name so stipulated by their parents or, if the parents do not
agree on the name, shall take the name specified by a court of competent
jurisdiction to be the name that is in the best interests of the child. The original certificate of birth shall
contain the name so stipulated. The
child or children or the parents thereof may petition the department of health
to issue a new original certificate of birth, and not a duplicate of the
original certificate that has been amended, altered, or modified, in the new
name of the child, and the department shall issue the new original certificate
of birth. As used in this section "name"
includes the first name, middle name, or last name."
2. By amending subsection (d) to read:
"(d) Nothing in this section shall be construed to
limit the power of the courts to order the department to prepare new
certificates of birth under section [584-23.] -21."
SECTION 7. Section 532-6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§532-6
To child born to parents not married to each other. Every child born to parents not married to
each other at the time of the child's birth and for whom the parent and child
relationship has not been established pursuant to chapter [584]
shall be considered as an heir to the child's mother, and shall inherit her
estate, in whole or in part, as the case may be, in like manner as if the child
had been born in lawful wedlock."
SECTION 8. Section 560:2-114, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) Except as provided in subsections (b) and
(c), for purposes of intestate succession by, through, or from a person, an
individual is the child of the child's natural parents, regardless of their
marital status. The parent and child
relationship may be established under chapter [584.] ."
SECTION 9. Section 571-14, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a)
Except as provided in sections 603-21.5 and 604-8, the court shall have
exclusive original jurisdiction:
(1) To
try any offense committed against a child by the child's parent or guardian or
by any other person having the child's legal or physical custody, and any
violation of section 707-726, 707-727, 709-902, 709‑903, 709-903.5,
709-904, 709-905, 709-906, or 302A-1135, whether or not included in other
provisions of this paragraph or paragraph (2);
(2) To
try any adult charged with:
(A) Deserting,
abandoning, or failing to provide support for any person in violation of law;
(B) An
offense, other than a felony, against the person of the defendant's husband or
wife;
(C) Any
violation of an order issued pursuant to chapter 586; or
(D) Any
violation of an order issued by a family court judge.
In any case within paragraph (1) or (2), the court, in its discretion, may waive its jurisdiction over the offense charged;
(3) In
all proceedings under chapter 580, and in all proceedings under chapter [584;]
;
(4) In
proceedings under chapter 575, the Uniform Desertion and Nonsupport Act, and
under chapter 576B, the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act;
(5) For
commitment of an adult alleged to be mentally defective or mentally ill;
(6) In
all proceedings for support between parent and child or between husband and
wife;
(7) In
all proceedings for pre-trial detention or waiver of jurisdiction over an adult
who was a child at the time of an alleged criminal act as provided in section
571-13 or 571-22;
(8) In
all proceedings under chapter 586, Domestic Abuse Protective Orders; and
(9) For
the protection of vulnerable adults under chapter 346, part X.
In
any case within paragraph (3), (4), or (6), the attorney general, through the
child support enforcement agency, may exercise concurrent jurisdiction as
provided in chapter 576E."
SECTION 10. Section 571-50, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§571-50 Modification of decree, rehearing. Except as otherwise provided by this chapter, any decree or order of the court may be modified at any time.
At any time during supervision of a child the court may issue notice or other appropriate process to the child if the child is of sufficient age to understand the nature of the process, to the parents, and to any other necessary parties to appear at a hearing on a charge of violation of the terms of supervision, for any change in or modification of the decree or for discharge. The provisions of this chapter relating to process, custody, and detention at other stages of the proceeding shall be applicable.
A parent, guardian, custodian, or next friend of any child whose status has been adjudicated by the court, or any adult affected by a decree of the court, at any time may petition the court for a rehearing on the ground that new evidence, which was not known or not available through the exercise of due diligence at the time of the original hearing and which might affect the decree, has been discovered. Upon a satisfactory showing of this evidence, the court shall order a new hearing and make any disposition of the case that the facts and the best interests of the child warrant.
A parent, guardian, or next friend of a child whose legal custody has been transferred by the court to an institution, facility, agency, or person may petition the court for modification or revocation of the decree, on the ground that the legal custodian has wrongfully denied application for the release of the child or has failed to act upon it within a reasonable time, or has acted in an arbitrary manner not consistent with the welfare of the child or the public interest. An institution, facility, agency, or person vested with legal custody of a child may petition the court for a renewal, modification, or revocation of the custody order on the ground that the change is necessary for the welfare of the child or in the public interest. The court may dismiss the petition if on preliminary investigation it finds the petition without substance. If the court is of the opinion that the decree should be reviewed, it shall conduct a hearing on notice to all parties concerned, and may enter an order continuing, modifying, or terminating the decree.
Notwithstanding the foregoing provisions of this section the court's authority with respect to the review, rehearing, renewal, modification, or revocation of decrees, judgments, or orders entered in the hereinbelow listed classes of proceedings shall be limited by any specific limitations set forth in the statutes governing these proceedings or in any other specifically applicable statutes or rules. These proceedings are as follows:
(1) Annulment, divorce, separation, and other proceedings under chapter 580;
(2) Adoption proceedings under chapter 578;
(3) [Paternity] Parentage proceedings
under chapter [584;] ;
(4) Termination of parental rights proceedings under this chapter; and
(5) State hospital commitment proceedings under chapter 334.
A decree, judgment, or order committing a child to the care of the director of human services shall be reviewable under this section at the instance of others other than duly authorized representatives of the department only after a lapse of thirty days following the date of the decree, judgment, or order, and thereafter only at intervals of not less than one year.
Notwithstanding this section the court shall not conduct a rehearing of any petition, filed under section 571-11(1), which, following a hearing, has been denied or dismissed."
SECTION 11. Section 571-52.6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§571-52.6
Child support order, judgment, or decree; accident and health or
sickness insurance coverage. Each
order, judgment, or decree under this chapter or chapter 576B, 580, or [584]
ordering a person to pay child support shall include
the following provisions:
(1) Both the obligor and the obligee are required to file with the state case registry, through the child support enforcement agency, upon entry of the child support order and to update as appropriate, information on the identity and location of the party, including social security number, residential and mailing addresses, telephone number, driver's license number if different from social security number, and name, address, and telephone number of the party's employer; and
(2) The liability of that person for accident and health or sickness insurance coverage when available at reasonable cost."
SECTION 12. Section 571-84, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) The court shall maintain records of all cases
brought before it. Except as provided in
sections 571-84.6 and [584-20.5,] -19, in proceedings
under section 571-11 and in [paternity] parentage proceedings
under chapter [584,] , the following records
shall be withheld from public inspection:
the court docket, petitions, complaints, motions, and other papers filed
in any case; transcripts of testimony taken by the court; and findings,
judgments, orders, decrees, and other papers other than social records filed in
proceedings before the court. The
records other than social records shall be open to inspection: by the parties and their attorneys, by an
institution or agency to which custody of a minor has been transferred, and by
an individual who has been appointed guardian; with consent of the judge, by
persons having a legitimate interest in the proceedings from the standpoint of
the welfare of the minor; and, pursuant to order of the court or the rules of
court, by persons conducting pertinent research studies, and by persons,
institutions, and agencies having a legitimate interest in the protection,
welfare, treatment, or disposition of the minor."
SECTION 13. Section 571-84.5, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§571-84.5
Support order, decree, judgment, or acknowledgment; social security
number. The social security number
of any individual who is a party to a divorce decree, or subject to a support
order or [paternity] parentage determination, or has made an
acknowledgment of [paternity] parentage issued under this chapter
or chapter 576B, 580, or [584] shall be placed
in the records relating to the matter."
SECTION 14. Section 571-87, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (c) to read as follows:
"(c)
The maximum allowable fee shall not exceed the following schedule:
(1) Cases
arising under chapters [[]587A[]] and 346, part X:
(A) Predisposition . . . . . . .. . . . . . . $3,000;
(B) Postdisposition review hearing . . . . . $1,000;
(2) Cases
arising under chapters 560, 571, 580, and
[584]
. . . . . . .. . .. . . . . . . . . .$3,000.
Payments in excess of any maximum provided
for under paragraphs (1) and (2) may be made whenever the court in which the
representation was rendered certifies, based upon representations
of extraordinary circumstances, attested to by the applicant, that the amount
of the excess payment is necessary to provide fair compensation in light of
those circumstances,
and the payment is approved by the administrative judge of that court."
SECTION 15. Section 571-92, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§571-92
Application. This part shall
only apply to actions under chapters 580 and [584.] . Nothing in this part shall supersede any
provision of any existing state or federal law.
The provisions in this part shall be interpreted consistently with other
relevant laws and the standard of "best interest of the child" shall
remain paramount."
SECTION 16. Section 574-3, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§574-3
Children born to parents not married to each other. The registrar of births shall register any child born to parents not
married to each other at the time of the child's birth and where either the
natural parents have not married each other or where the parent and child
relationship has not been established pursuant to chapter [584,] ,
as having both a family name and given name chosen by the mother."
SECTION 17. Section 576B-401, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:
"(b) The tribunal may issue a temporary child support order if the tribunal determines that the order is appropriate and the individual ordered to pay is:
(1) A presumed [father]
parent of the child;
(2) Petitioning to
have [paternity] parentage adjudicated;
(3) Identified as the [father]
parent of the child through genetic testing;
(4) An alleged [father]
parent who has declined to submit to genetic testing;
(5) Shown by clear and
convincing evidence to be the [father] parent of the child;
(6) An acknowledged [father]
parent as provided by section [584-3.5;] -8;
(7) The [mother of]
individual who gave birth to the child; or
(8) An individual who has been ordered to pay child support in a previous proceeding and the order has not been reversed or vacated."
SECTION 18. Section 576B-402, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (b) to read as follows:
"(b) In a proceeding
to determine parentage, a responding tribunal of this State shall apply chapter
[584] and the rules of this State on choice of
law."
SECTION 19. Section 576E-2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§576E-2
Attorney general; powers. Notwithstanding
any other law to the contrary, the attorney general, through the agency and the
office, shall have concurrent jurisdiction with the court in all proceedings in
which a support obligation is established, modified, or enforced, including but
not limited to proceedings under chapters 571, 580, [584,] ,
and 576B. The attorney general, through
the agency and the office, may establish, modify, suspend, terminate, and
enforce child support obligations and collect or enforce spousal support using
the administrative process provided in this chapter on all cases for which the
department has a responsibility under Title IV-D of the Social Security Act,
including but not limited to welfare and nonwelfare cases in which the
responsible parent is subject to the department's jurisdiction, regardless of
the residence of the children for whom support is sought. These powers shall include but not be limited
to the power to:
(1) Conduct investigations into the ability of parties to pay support and into nonpayment of support;
(2) Administer oaths, issue subpoenas, and require production of books, accounts, documents, and evidence;
(3) Establish, modify, suspend, terminate, or enforce a child support order and to collect or enforce a spousal support order in conjunction with a child support order;
(4) Determine that a party has not complied with a court or administrative order of support and make recommendations to the court or other agency with respect to contempt or other appropriate proceedings;
(5) Establish arrearage;
(6) Establish an order for child support for periods which public assistance was provided to the child or children by the department of human services;
(7) Order and enforce assignment of future income under section 576E-16, chapter 571, and section 576D-14;
(8) Exercise the powers and authority described in this section, notwithstanding the existence of a prior court or administrative order of support issued by another state or foreign jurisdiction, except as modified or limited by this chapter;
(9) Determine that an obligor owes past-due support with respect to a child receiving assistance under a state program funded under Title IV-A of the Social Security Act, including Aid to Families with Dependent Children and Temporary Assistance to Needy Families and petition the court to issue an order that requires the obligor to pay such support in accordance with a plan approved by the court or, if the obligor is subject to such a plan and is not incapacitated, participate in work activities, as defined in 42 U.S.C. §607(d), as the court deems appropriate;
(10) Order genetic testing pursuant to chapter [584]
for the purpose of establishing [paternity,] parentage,
with payment of costs to be made by the agency, subject to recoupment by the
State from [the father or the mother,] a parent if appropriate,
if [paternity] parentage is established, and to also order
additional testing in any case if an original test result is contested, upon
request and advance payment by the contestant;
(11) Exercise the powers and authority described in this section, notwithstanding the existence of a prior court or administrative order of support issued by another state or foreign jurisdiction, except as modified or limited by this chapter and chapter 576B; and
(12) Delegate the powers and authority described in this section to hearings officers and employees of the agency."
SECTION 20. Section 607-5.6, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended by amending subsection (a) to read as follows:
"(a) In addition to the fees prescribed under
section 607-5 for a matrimonial action where either party has a minor child, or
a family court proceeding under chapter [584,] ,
the court shall collect a surcharge of $50 at the time of filing the initial
complaint or petition. In cases where the
surcharge has been initially waived, the court may collect the surcharge
subsequent to the filing with such surcharge to be assessed from either party
or apportioned between both parties."
SECTION 21. Section 634-37, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§634-37
Presumption of notice and service of process in child support cases. Whenever notice and service of process is
required for child support enforcement proceedings subsequent to an order
issued pursuant to chapter 571, 576B, 576E, 580, or [584,] ,
upon a showing that diligent effort has been made to ascertain the location of
a party, notice and service of process shall be presumed to be satisfied upon
delivery of written notice to the most recent residential or employer address
on file with the state case registry pursuant to section 571-52.6."
SECTION 22. Chapter 584, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.
SECTION 23. This Act does not affect rights and duties that matured, penalties that were incurred, and proceedings that were begun before its effective date.
SECTION 24. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 25. This Act shall take effect on January 1, 2023.
INTRODUCED BY: |
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Report Title:
Uniform Parentage Act; Repeal; Amend
Description:
Repeals and replaces the Uniform Parentage Act of 1973 with the Uniform Parentage Act of 2017. Effective 1/1/2023.
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.