QUESTIONS PRESENTED
               On June 7, 2006, you asked for our advice regarding whether Marcus W~, would be considered
                  the child of James W~, Jr., the number holder (NH) under Maryland intestacy law.
               
               SUMMARY
               Based on our review of the record as it currently exists and our research of relevant
                  Maryland intestacy statutes and case law, we believe that a Maryland court could find
                  that Marcus is not the child of the NH. We recommend, however, further development
                  of the record before determining that Marcus is no longer entitled to receive child's
                  insurance benefits.
               
               BACKGROUND
               The NH was receiving Social Security benefits at the time of his death on November
                  17, 2001. The NH died in Maryland. At the time of the NH's death, he was allegedly
                  married to Lisa Carol W~.
               
               On September 21, 2002, Lisa gave birth to Marcus in Florida. Marcus was born 308 days
                  after the NH's death. The birth certificate for Marcus identifies the NH as his father.
               
               On April 3, 2003, Lisa filed for surviving child's insurance benefits on behalf of
                  Marcus. Lisa named the NH as Marcus' father. On April 9, 2003, Marcus was awarded
                  benefits effective January 2003.
               
               The Office of Inspector General (OIG) referred this case to determine if the award
                  to Marcus was proper since he was born 308 days after the NH's death. See POMS GN 00306.020 Presumption of
                     Legitimacy (stating that in situations where a child is born more than 287 days after the death
                  of the mother's husband or her divorce from him, the issue must be developed and the
                  case submitted to the RCC in the absence of a precedent opinion).
               
               The field office has repeatedly tried to contact Lisa to obtain medical records regarding
                  her pregnancy, but she has not responded to these attempts. There was an earlier indication
                  in the record that her whereabouts may have been unknown. Lisa's physicians will not
                  release any medical information to the field office without her signed consent. The
                  record also indicates that the field office has determined from Family and Children
                  Services that Lisa is currently not allowed to have any contact with Marcus.
               
               In a Report of Contact on May 15, 2006, Terry W~, an adult son of the NH, reported
                  that the NH had been living with him in Maryland since approximately May or June 2001
                  until he died in November 2001. Prior to moving to Maryland, NH had been living in
                  a hotel in Florida. According to Terry, the NH and Lisa had not been living together
                  for over two years.
               
               Terry reported that the NH moved to Maryland because the NH had been in poor health
                  and needed someone to take care of him. Terry also stated that he had been informed
                  from his grandfather that Lisa allegedly tried to have NH killed and that this matter
                  was being investigated by the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Department in Florida.
                  Terry stated he never heard of a posthumous child being born to Lisa until he was
                  first contacted by SSA. His opinion was that Marcus could not possibly be the NH's
                  child.
               
               On June 7, 2006, James W~, Sr., (James Sr.), the father of the NH and the grandfather
                  of Terry, submitted a certified statement (Form SSA-795). In the certified statement,
                  James Sr. stated that he drove the NH to Maryland on or about October 17, 2001 to
                  live with Terry. James Sr. stated that the NH moved to Maryland because he was very
                  ill and that he was incapable of looking after himself. He was on oxygen, in a wheel
                  chair, and on prescribed morphine. According to James Sr., the NH had been in and
                  out of hospitals for more than two years and that he would not have been capable of
                  fathering a child. James Sr. also stated that the other reason that NH was moved to
                  Maryland to live with Terry was because Lisa was allegedly trying to have him killed.
               
               DISCUSSION
               Section 402(d) of the Social Security Act provides that every child of an individual
                  who dies a fully or currently insured individual shall be entitled to child's insurance
                  benefits if that child meets certain qualifications. 42 U.S.C. § 402(d)(1). In determining
                  whether an applicant is the child of an insured individual, the Commissioner will
                  apply the intestacy laws of the state where the deceased was domiciled at the time
                  of his death. 42 U.S.C. ' 416(h)(2)(A); 20 C.F.R. § 404.355(b)(1) (2005). An applicant
                  having the status of "child" under the state's intestacy laws would have the same
                  status for purposes of obtaining child's insurance benefits.  Id. We are assuming based on your memorandum that the NH's domicile at the time of his
                  death was Maryland. Accordingly, Maryland law applies.
               
               Under Maryland inheritance law, a child of the decedent who is conceived before the
                  death of the decedent, but born afterwards shall inherit as if he had been born in
                  the lifetime of the decedent. Md. Code Ann., Estates & Trusts § 3-107 (2006). Moreover,
                  a child born or conceived during a marriage is presumed to be the legitimate child
                  of both spouses. Md. Code Ann., Estates & Trusts § 1-206 (2006). Under this provision,
                  the husband is the presumed father of the child conceived by his wife during the marriage.
               
               The presumption that a child born or conceived during a marriage is the child of both
                  spouses is rebuttable. See Md. Code Ann. Estates & Trust § 1-105. Although Section 1-206 does not address how
                  the presumption may be rebutted, case law suggests that the presumption is rebuttable
                  in the same way as prescribed under the paternity statute. See Turner v.
                     Whisted, 607 A.2d 935, 938 (Md. 1992) (recognizing that paternity can be established under
                  either the Family Law Article or the Estates and Trusts Article and that "the rules
                  of evidence controlling the proof of paternity ought to be the same in either case.")
                  (quoting Shelley
                     v. Smith, 241 A.2d 682 (Md. 1968)).
               
               Under the Family Law Article, the burden is on the complainant to establish by a "preponderance
                  of the evidence that the alleged father is the father of the child." Md. Code Ann.,
                  Family Law § 5-1027(a) (2006). The statute further provides that "the [legitimacy]
                  presumption . . . may be rebutted by the testimony of a person other than the mother
                  or her husband." Md. Code Ann., Family Law § 5-1027 (2006). The presumption of legitimacy
                  may also be rebutted by blood tests or genetic testing. See Toft v. State of Nevada, 671 A.2d 99, 110 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1996) (stating that scientific data generally
                  is at least as reliable, if not more significantly reliable, as testimony from one
                  of the spouses' relative or friends that a husband and wife lived separate and apart)
               
               In this case, Marcus was born 308 days after the NH's death, which is 42 days longer
                  than the normal gestation period. See
                     The Merck Manual 2017 (17th ed. 1999) (stating that the typical pregnancy is considered to last 266
                  days from the time of conception). A question is therefore raised as to whether Marcus
                  was conceived prior to the death of the NH. For purposes of this analysis, we are
                  assuming that the NH was still married to Lisa at the time of his death. If Marcus
                  was conceived prior to the NH's death in November 2001, the NH is presumed to be his
                  father. If not, the presumption would not apply.
               
               We have found no legal authority in Maryland for the proposition that because a child
                  is born more than a certain number of days after the death of the husband of the child's
                  mother, the presumption of legitimacy will no longer apply. Courts in Maryland have
                  generally been reluctant to take judicial notice of the normal gestation period, particularly
                  in the absence of medical evidence. In Harward
                     v. Harward, 196 A. 318, 321 (Md. 1938), for example, the court stated that "neither the mean
                  nor the extremes of the period of gestation in a woman is so commonly and precisely
                  known that the courts may take judicial notice of them . . . ." However, a more recent
                  case, Kassama v. Magat 792 A.2d 1102, 1105, n. 5 (Md. 2002), suggests that courts may now be able to take
                  judicial notice of normal gestation period. Citing to medical authority for support,
                  the court stated that although the human gestational period is commonly referred to
                  as being approximately 280 days (40 weeks) from the first day of the mother's last
                  normal menstrual period, the actual gestational term, based on ovulatory or fertilization
                  age, is two weeks shorter --- 38 weeks or 266 days. Id.
               Despite this recent case law, we have not found a Maryland case where a court has
                  actually determined that a child is not the child of the mother's husband solely because
                  of an abnormally long gestational period and that this would alone rebut the presumption
                  of legitimacy. Accordingly, we believe that in a case such as this one, a Maryland
                  court would look at the evidence as a whole, and that it would not only take notice
                  of the excessively long gestational period, but it would also consider other evidence
                  in the record to determine whether the presumption of legitimacy should apply or whether
                  it is rebutted.
               
               In this case, we have statements from both the NH's adult son, Terry, and the NH's
                  father, James Sr., that the NH moved to Maryland in October 2001 at the latest. They
                  explain that the NH had to leave Florida because he was seriously ill and incapable
                  of taking care of himself. Terry also states that the NH had not lived with Lisa for
                  over two years prior to his move to Maryland.
               
               There is no evidence in the record that Lisa visited the NH in Maryland in October
                  or November prior to his death. Indeed, based on the statements from Terry and James
                  Sr. that Lisa allegedly tried to have the NH killed, it seems highly unlikely that
                  there was any contact between Lisa and the NH in the weeks or month before he died.
               
               There is minimal evidence from Lisa. We have only Marcus' birth certificate listing
                  the NH as the father and the medical records regarding Lisa's caesarean section operation.
                  The birth certificate was obviously completed after the NH's death and it appears
                  that the only reason that the NH's name was placed on the birth certificate was because
                  he was allegedly married to Lisa. The cesarean section records did not reveal any
                  evidence regarding Marcus, other than his Apgars score which was normal at 9/9 and
                  that he weighed 8 pounds, 2 ounces. We also do not have any genetic or blood tests
                  to consider, and there is no evidence from Lisa that she had any contact with the
                  NH in the weeks before his death.
               
               This case is of course complicated by the fact that Lisa is not responding to the
                  field office's attempts to contact her so that further medical records or statements
                  can be obtained, particularly from her physician regarding her pre-natal care and
                  the length of her pregnancy.
               
               In sum, based on the record as it currently exists, which would include the abnormally
                  long gestational period, the statements from Terry and James Sr., and the minimal
                  evidence from Lisa, we believe a Maryland court would likely find that Lisa has not
                  established by a preponderance of the evidence that the NH is Marcus' father. The
                  evidence is sufficient to raise a question of fact as to whether Marcus was conceived
                  prior to the NH's death and we think that a court could find that the presumption
                  of legitimacy has been rebutted.
               
               Accordingly, you would be justified in reopening the prior award of benefits. However,
                  we would suggest further development before you determine whether Marcus' benefits
                  should be terminated. You may want to consider getting a statement from the NH's physician
                  to confirm whether the NH was physically incapable of fathering a child due to his
                  medical condition, as suggested by James Sr. Likewise, you may want to consider getting
                  Marcus' pediatrician records from the individual who apparently now has custody of
                  Marcus. The pediatrician records may indicate whether Marcus was a post-mature child
                  at birth. Any additional medical evidence that is obtained can be submitted to a medical
                  consultant for an opinion if needed.
               
               Additionally, as stated above, we recommend that you have Terry sign the SSA-795 so
                  that his statements will be certified. See POMS GN 04120.015(B)(5) (explaining that the SSA-795 should be signed by the witness).
                  We also recommend that you confirm whether the NH and Lisa were divorced at the time
                  of his death as indicated on the birth certificate. In such a situation, the presumption
                  of legitimacy would not apply.
               
               CONCLUSION
               Based on the above, we believe that a court could find that Marcus was not the child
                  of the NH under the Maryland intestacy law based on the record as it currently exists.
                  However, as explained above, we recommend further development before you make this
                  determination.
               
               Donna L. C~ 
Regional Chief Counsel
               
               By: ________________________ 
Kenneth D~ 
Assistant Regional Counsel