Matter of Ezequiel L.-V. v Inez M.
2018 NY Slip Op 03895 [161 AD3d 689]
May 31, 2018
Appellate Division, First Department
Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431.
As corrected through Wednesday, June 27, 2018


[*1]
 In the Matter of Ezequiel L.-V., Appellant,
v
Inez M., Respondent, et al., Respondent.

Larry S. Bachner, Jamaica, for appellant.

New York Legal Assistance Group, New York (Beth E. Goldman of counsel), for respondent.

Kenneth M. Tuccillo, Hastings on Hudson, attorney for the child.

Order, Family Court, New York County (Jane Pearl, J.), entered on or about June 27, 2016, which dismissed the paternity petition, unanimously reversed, without costs, and the matter remanded for further proceedings pursuant to this order.

The Family Court should not have denied and dismissed the paternity petition without a hearing. The stated reason for the dismissal was the existence of a valid acknowledgment of paternity executed by respondents. The statute only permits the parties to such an acknowledgment to challenge it (Family Ct Act § 516-a [b] [iv]). However, the existence of a valid acknowledgment of paternity does not bar a claim of paternity by one who is not a party to it (Matter of Thomas T. [Luba R.], 121 AD3d 800 [2d Dept 2014]; see also Matter of Tyrone G. v Fifi N., 189 AD2d 8, 14 [1st Dept 1993] [order of filiation not a bar to claim of paternity by stranger to that proceeding]). Therefore, petitioner is entitled to a hearing, and we remand to the Family Court for further proceedings, including, as appropriate, an estoppel hearing and/or a DNA test.[FN*] Concur—Renwick, J.P., Manzanet-Daniels, Mazzarelli, Gesmer, Oing, JJ.

Footnotes


Footnote *:In an earlier proceeding in this case, the support magistrate who referred the matter for a hearing on equitable estoppel opined that the February 17, 2011 divorce judgment based on abandonment (Domestic Relations Law § 170 [2]) constituted a finding that petitioner had not had sexual relations with the mother for a year. However, the judgment does not state when the mother alleged that petitioner abandoned her or the facts alleged to have constituted the abandonment. Furthermore, although refusal to engage in sexual relations without justification may constitute constructive abandonment, an attempt at reconciliation, including sexual relations, during the period of abandonment, does not preclude entry of a judgment of divorce (Haymes v Haymes, 252 AD2d 439, 440 [1st Dept 1998]). Accordingly, the divorce judgment does not necessarily bar this petition.