Issue
Whether Wyoming law recognizes Christopher B. B~ (the claimant) as the child of Jason
J~, the number holder (NH), for the purpose of intestate succession, in light of the
fact that another man, Bryan B~, signed an acknowledgement of paternity.[1]
Short Answer
The evidence before the Agency does not establish a father-child relationship between
the claimant and the NH under the Wyoming Uniform Parentage Act; therefore, the claimant
cannot inherit from the NH and cannot receive child insurance benefits under the Social
Security Act (Act).
Facts
According to information you have provided, the claimant was born in Utah on February
19, 1990. One day later, Bryan B~ signed an "Acknowledgement of Paternity" and filed
the acknowledgment with the State of Utah. He is listed as the father on the claimant's
birth certificate. The claimant believed that Bryan B~ was his father until his seventeenth
birthday. On that day, the NH's mother informed the claimant that the NH was his father.
The claimant's mother subsequently admitted that the claimant's father was the NH,
not Bryan B~. The NH died on May 12, 1998. At the time of his death, the NH lived
in the State of Wyoming.
The evidence before the Agency consists of the following: a copy of the claimant's
birth certificate, which lists Bryan B~ as his father; an acknowledgement of paternity
signed by both the claimant's mother and Bryan B~; a report of contact during which
the claimant stated that the NH's mother told the claimant that the NH was his father
and that the claimant's mother has allegedly admitted that the NH is the claimant's
father; a picture of the claimant, as an infant, with the NH; a letter written by
NH that asked about the claimant; and the results of Y-chromosome STR testing of the
claimant and the NH's father, which revealed the two share a common male lineage.
Legal Analysis
Whether the claimant is entitled to child's insurance benefits on the NH's earnings
record depends upon whether he can be considered the NH's "child" under the Act. As
relevant here, the Act provides that, in determining whether an applicant is the child
of the deceased wage earner, the Commissioner shall apply the law that determines
devolution of intestate personal property in the wage earner's state of domicile at
death. 42 U.S.C. § 416(h)(2)(A); 20 C.F.R. § 404.355(b)(4); Program Operations Manual
System (POMS) GN 00306.001(C)(2)(a). In this case, the NH lived in Wyoming when he died; therefore, Wyoming
intestacy law applies. See 42 U.S.C. § 416(h)(2)(A); 20 C.F.R. § 404.355; POMS GN 0306.001(C)(1)(a).
The relevant Wyoming rule of intestate succession provides that the estate of any
intestate without a husband or wife shall descend and be distributed to his children
surviving and the descendants of his children who are dead. . . . Wyo. Stat. Ann.
§§ 2-4-101(c)(i). Wyoming probate code provides that for purposes of intestate succession,
a person born out of wedlock is a child of the father, if the relationship of parent
and child has been established under the Uniform Parentage Act. Id. §§ 2-4-107(a)(iii).
The Wyoming Uniform Parentage Act, see id. § 14-2-401 to 907, provides that
[t]he father-child relationship is established between a man and a child by:
(i) An unrebutted presumption of the man's paternity of the child under W.S. § 14-2-504
[Presumption of paternity in context of marriage];
POMS GN 00306.680.E.
(ii) An effective acknowledgment of paternity by the man under article 6 of this act,
unless the acknowledgment has been rescinded or successfully challenged; [2]
(iii) An adjudication of the man's paternity;
(iv) Adoption of the child by the man; or
(v) The man's having consented to assisted reproduction by his wife under article
8 of this act which resulted in the birth of the child.
Id. § 14-2-501(b).
In this case, the only applicable provision of the Wyoming Uniform Parentage Act is
§ 14-2-501(b)(ii) - whether there is an effective acknowledgment of paternity by the
NH or Bryan B~, which has not been rescinded or challenged in court.
As noted above, the claimant was born in the State of Utah and the day after his birth,
Bryan B~ signed and filed an acknowledgement of paternity in Utah. Bryan B~ is the
claimant's declarant father under Utah Code Ann. § 78-45g-201 2(b) (2005), which provides
that a father-child relationship is established between a man and a child by an effective
declaration of paternity by the man unless the declaration has been rescinded or successfully
challenged. See Utah Code Ann. § 78-45g-301 (2005) (a man claiming to be the genetic father of the
child may sign a declaration of paternity to establish the paternity of the child);
id. § 78-45g-302 (2005) (execution of declaration of paternity). There is no evidence
the declaration of paternity has been rescinded or challenged in court; therefore,
it remains effective in the State of Utah. Id. § 78-45g-306 (2005).
The Wyoming Uniform Parentage Act provides that a Wyoming court will give full faith
and credit to an acknowledgement of paternity effective in another state, if the acknowledgement
has been signed and is otherwise in compliance with the law of the state. Wyo. Stat.
Ann. § 14-2-611. Because Bryan B~ signed his declaration of paternity (which has not
been rescinded or successfully challenged in court) in accordance with Utah law, the
State of Wyoming considers him as the claimant's father.
Conclusion
The evidence before the Agency does not establish a father-child relationship between
the claimant and the NH under Wyoming law. Under Wyoming law a father-child relationship
exists between Bryan B~ and the claimant, due to an effective acknowledgment of paternity.
Therefore, the claimant cannot inherit from the NH and cannot receive child insurance
benefits under the Act.
2 The POMS provide that effective 07/01/2000, a man is considered (but not presumed)
to be the natural father of a child born in Wyoming if, with the consent of the mother,
he has acknowledged his paternity by signing an affidavit of paternity and an acknowledgment
of the privileges and obligations associated with parentage and filed these documents
with the Wyoming office of vital records. The required contents of the mother's consent
and the father's affidavit are essentially the same as those stated in B.5. POMS GN 00306.680.E.
Sincerely yours,
Deana R. E~-L~
Acting Regional Chief Counsel
By:________________________
Stephanie F. K~
Assistant Regional Counsel