QUESTIONS PRESENTED
               On December 20, 2007, you requested our opinion as to (1) whether a parent-child relationship
                  exists between Chris F. S~ (Number Holder) and Cayden J. S~; (2) the effective date
                  of the parent-child relationship, if any; and (3) whether retroactive benefits should
                  be paid.
               
               On January 22, 2008, we requested additional evidence consisting of the following
                  documents that were referenced in the file: (1) a copy of the lease showing that the
                  mother and child had lived with the Number Holder; (2) a copy of the letter from the
                  landlord confirming that the mother and child had lived in the same home as the Number
                  Holder; (3) statements from family members addressing the Number Holder's acknowledgment
                  of paternity; and (4) a copy of the acknowledgment of paternity form signed by the
                  Number Holder and referenced on the "Social Security & Paternity & Acknowledgment"
                  form dated March 27, 2006. In response, on June 5, 2008, you provided us with copies
                  of affidavits from eight family members confirming that the Number Holder had acknowledged
                  paternity.
               
               CONCLUSION
               We have reviewed the information you provided and have researched the relevant provisions
                  of Pennsylvania law as it pertains to paternity. We have also reviewed the relevant
                  regulations to determine the effective date of the parent-child relationship and whether
                  retroactive benefits should be paid. Based on our review, we believe that a Pennsylvania
                  court would likely determine that the evidence is sufficient to constitute clear and
                  convincing evidence of a parent child relationship between the Number Holder and Cayden.
               
               BACKGROUND
               According to the information that you have provided, Cayden was born on March 27,
                  2006. Cayden's birth certificate indicates that his mother is Casey L. N. O~. The
                  birth certificate does not include the name of his father, indicating only that the
                  information was not recorded. It does, however, include his full name, Cayden J. S~,
                  identifying his surname as that of the Number Holder. At the time of his birth, Ms.
                  O~ and the Number Holder were not married.
               
               On March 27, 2006, the Pottstown Memorial Medical Center issued a record of birth
                  which certified that Cayden was born on that date to Ms. O~ and Chris F. S~, Jr.,
                  the Number Holder. The record of birth was signed by an authorized official and an
                  attending physician, and affixed with the official hospital seal. According to the
                  Pennsylvania Department of Health, Division of Vital Records, a record of birth such
                  as this one is considered a hospital memento and is not an official record of birth.
               
               Also on March 27, 2006, on a hospital form titled "Social Security & Paternity & Acknowledgment,"
                  a hospital official certified that the mother and father of Cayden J. S~ had signed
                  acknowledgment of paternity forms. The hospital form provides for, and contains, the
                  name of the mother, Ms. O~, but does not provide for the name of the father. The acknowledgment
                  of paternity that the Number Holder allegedly signed was not itself included in the
                  documents that you have forwarded to us. In addition, a memo from the New York regional
                  office indicates that the hospital could not verify paternity from its records.
               
               According to an Agency worksheet, on April 10, 2006, and March 14, 2007, Ms. O~ filed
                  applications for a social security number on Cayden's behalf. Both applications included
                  the name of Cayden's mother, but indicated that the name of his father was unknown.
               
               On or about March 22, 2007, Ms. O~ and Cayden moved to the state of New York. On April
                  17, 2007, Ms. O~ filed a paternity petition with the family court in New York. At
                  a default hearing on June 28, 2007, Ms. O~ testified that the Number Holder had signed
                  an acknowledgment of paternity in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The matter was
                  adjourned for thirty days to await further notice from the department of social services
                  regarding any prior paternity.
               
               One month later, on July 27, 2007, the Number Holder died in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.
               On August 14, 2007, Ms. O~ filed an application for surviving child's benefits on
                  behalf of Cayden and for a lump sum death payment. This application is not contained
                  in the materials that you have forwarded to us.
               
               On August 22, 2007, a family court judge in the state of New York entered an order
                  dismissing Ms. O~'s paternity petition. The judge indicated that there was no need
                  for the matter to proceed because the Number Holder had acknowledged paternity.
               
               An Agency worksheet also shows that Ms. O~ submitted as evidence a letter from a landlord,
                  as well as a copy of a lease, indicating that she and Cayden had lived with the Number
                  Holder until March 2007. Neither of these documents is contained in the materials
                  that you have forwarded to us.
               
               Finally, at our request, you have provided additional documents consisting of affidavits
                  from eight relatives of the Number Holder and Ms. O~. These affidavits include individual
                  statements from the Number Holder's parents and brother, as well as Ms. O~'s parents
                  and brother, that the Number Holder had acknowledged that Cayden was his son. Both
                  the Number Holder's parents and Ms. O~'s parents also stated that they and the Number
                  Holder had been present at Cayden's birth. Sherry W~, the Number Holder's mother,
                  stated that for approximately one year, Ms. O~ and the Number Holder had lived in
                  the apartment above her home, and that the Number Holder had cared for Cayden in his
                  first year before Ms. O~ took Cayden to live in New York. Chris F. S~, Sr., the Number
                  Holder's father, confirmed that the Number Holder had supported Cayden until Ms. O~
                  had moved to New York.
               
               James O~, Ms. O~'s brother, stated that he had known the Number Holder for several
                  years and that the Number Holder had been present at Ms. O~'s baby shower.
               
               DISCUSSION
               The Social Security Act provides that, in determining whether an applicant is the
                  child of an insured individual, the Commissioner will apply the inheritance law of
                  the state in which the individual was domiciled at the time the application was filed
                  or, if the insured individual is dead, of the state in which the insured individual
                  was domiciled at the time of his death. 42 U.S.C. § 416(h)(2)(A); 20 C.F.R. § 404.355(b)(1)(2007).
                  Because the Number Holder was domiciled in Pennsylvania at the time of his death,
                  Pennsylvania intestacy law applies.
               
               The Pennsylvania intestacy statute addressing persons born out of wedlock, 20 Pa.
                  Cons. Stat. Ann. § 2107(c), indicates that an individual will be considered to be
                  the child of a putative father if one of the following conditions is met:
               
               
                  - 
                     
                        (a)  
                           If the parents of a child born out of wedlock shall have married each other. 
 
 
- 
                     
                        (b)  
                           If during the lifetime of the child, the father openly holds out the child to be his
                              and receives the child into his home, or openly holds the child out to be his and
                              provides support for the child which shall be determined by clear and convincing evidence.
                            
 
 
- 
                     
                        (c)  
                           If there is clear and convincing evidence that the man was the father of the child,
                              which may include a prior court determination of paternity.
                            
 
 
In this case, the first condition has not been met because the Number Holder and Ms.
                  O~ were not married. We believe, however, that a Pennsylvania court would likely find
                  that the second condition has been met. That is, we believe that a court would find
                  that there is clear and convincing evidence that the Number Holder openly held out
                  Cayden as his child, received him into his home, and provided support for him. Under
                  Pennsylvania law, the clear and convincing evidence standard requires "'proof greater
                  than a mere preponderance, but less than beyond a reasonable doubt.'" Estate of Vanoni, 798 A.2d 203, 209 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2002) (citations omitted). "'Clear and convincing
                  evidence' is the highest burden in our civil law and requires that the fact-finder
                  be able to 'come to clear conviction, without hesitancy, of the truth of the precise
                  fact in issue.'" In re Estate of Heske, 647 A.2d 243, 244 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1994) (citing Lessner v. Rubinson, 592 A.2d 678, 681 (Pa. 1991)). Here, the strongest evidence that the Number Holder
                  openly held out Cayden as his child consists of affidavits from eight members of both
                  his and Ms. O~'s families, including all four grandparents, in which they confirm
                  that the Number Holder had acknowledged that Cayden was his child. In addition to
                  the Number Holder's acknowledgment of paternity to his family, the parents of both
                  the Number Holder and Ms. O~ stated that they and the Number Holder had been present
                  at Cayden's birth. Furthermore, Ms. O~'s mother specifically stated that the Number
                  Holder had acknowledged paternity to the hospital staff as well as to all who had
                  been present.
               
               In addition to evidence that the Number Holder openly held out Cayden to be his child
                  by acknowledging paternity, the evidence shows that the Number Holder received Cayden
                  into his home and provided support for him. Pennsylvania courts have considered providing
                  a home and support for a child to be relevant factors in establishing that a father
                  has openly held out a child as his under 20 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 2107(c)(2). See In re Estate of Simmons-Carton, 644 A.2d 791, 797 (Pa. Super. 1994) (finding, among other factors, that evidence
                  that a relationship between the alleged father and the mother began several years
                  before the child's birth, that the parties continued to live together after the birth,
                  and that the alleged father treated the child as his and provided support for her
                  met the criteria for determining paternity under § 2107); In re Montenegro, Jr., 528 A.2d 1381, 1384 (Pa. Super. 1987) (holding that a putative father was estopped
                  from denying paternity where he had held himself out to be the child's father by marrying
                  the mother and assuming responsibility for the care of their child).
               
               In this case, Agency notes reference a copy of a lease which shows that Cayden and
                  his mother lived with the Number Holder until March 2007. Although the copy of the
                  lease was not included in the documents that we received, sworn affidavits from several
                  family members attest to the fact that Cayden and his mother lived with the Number
                  Holder for approximately the first year of Cayden's life. For example, the Number
                  Holder's mother testified in her affidavit that the Number Holder and Ms. O~ lived
                  together for approximately one year before Ms. O~ became pregnant. Similarly, Ms.
                  O~'s mother testified in her affidavit that the Number Holder and her daughter had
                  been in a relationship since 2002, and had lived together in her home before moving,
                  together, to another home in October 2005. Moreover, separate affidavits from the
                  Number Holder's mother and father, as well as from Ms. O~'s mother, show that the
                  Number Holder provided support for Cayden until Ms. O~ moved to New York. Based on
                  these affidavits, we believe that a Pennsylvania court would find that there is clear
                  and convincing evidence that the Number Holder openly held out Cayden as his child,
                  received him in his home, and provided support for him.
               
               Finally, although we need not reach the third condition, we believe that a court would
                  likely find that the evidence also satisfies the requirements of § 2107(c)(3). To
                  meet this provision, Cayden must show by clear and convincing evidence that the Number
                  Holder was his father, and such evidence may include a prior court determination of
                  paternity. In this case, the evidence in support of paternity includes a hospital
                  record of birth which certifies that the Number Holder was Cayden's father. Although
                  this document is a hospital memento rather than an official birth record, it is consistent
                  with the family members' affidavits stating that the Number Holder was Cayden's father.
                  The evidence also includes a hospital form indicating that the Number Holder had signed
                  an acknowledgment of paternity. Similarly, although this form is not the official
                  acknowledgment of paternity, it too provides additional evidence consistent with the
                  affidavits in support of the Number Holder's paternity. The evidence further includes
                  a New York family court order dismissing Ms. O~'s petition for paternity based on
                  evidence that the Number Holder had acknowledged paternity. Although the court order
                  dismissing Ms. O~'s paternity petition does not meet the requirements of a court determination
                  of paternity under § 2107(c)(3), it does show that a court considered the Number Holder's
                  acknowledgment of paternity sufficient to render Ms. O~'s paternity petition moot.
                  Finally, as discussed above, the evidence includes sworn affidavits from eight family
                  members who attested to the Number Holder's acknowledgment of paternity. Based on
                  the considerable favorable evidence, and in the absence of any directly contradictory
                  evidence, it is our opinion that a Pennsylvania court would likely find clear and
                  convincing evidence that the Number Holder was Cayden's father.
               
               You have also requested our opinion as to the effective date of the parent-child relationship,
                  if any, and whether retroactive benefits should be paid. Regarding the effective date
                  of the parent child relationship, the regulations provide that, if the insured is
                  deceased, the child is entitled to benefits beginning with the first month covered
                  by the application in which he meets all other requirements for entitlement. 20 C.F.R.
                  § 404.352(a)(1). The requirements for entitlement include establishing that you are
                  the insured's child. 20 C.F.R. § 404.350(a)(1). Here, the date of Cayden's application
                  for benefits is August 14, 2007. Although there is other evidence in the file to support
                  a finding that Cayden was the Number Holder's child, the strongest evidence in support
                  of paternity consists of affidavits from the Number Holder's family members which
                  establish that the Number Holder openly held out Cayden as his child. Accordingly,
                  the date of the latest necessary piece of evidence establishing the Number Holder's
                  paternity is November 5, 2007, the latest date of the affidavits from the family members.
                  It is our opinion, therefore, that a parent-child relationship was established effective
                  November 5, 2007.
               
               Regarding retroactive benefits, the regulations further provide that if a child files
                  an application for benefits after the first month in which he could have been entitled
                  to them, he may receive retroactive benefits for up to six months preceding the month
                  in which his application was filed. 20 C.F.R. § 404.621(a)(2). Benefits may begin
                  with the first month in this six-month period in which the claimant meets all the
                  requirements for entitlement. 20 C.F.R. § 404.621(a)(2). In this case, Cayden did
                  not file his application after the first month in which he could have been entitled
                  to them. Rather, he filed his application for benefits on August 14, 2007, and met
                  all of the requirements for entitlement to benefits on November 5, 2007. Therefore,
                  because he filed his application for benefits three months before he met all of the
                  requirements for entitlement, retroactive benefits are not applicable.
               
               CONCLUSION
               For the reasons stated above, it is our opinion that a Pennsylvania court would likely
                  find the evidence sufficient to establish that the Number Holder was Cayden's father
                  under Pennsylvania law. Therefore, the Agency should find that there was a parent-child
                  relationship between the Number Holder and Cayden, with an effective date of November
                  5, 2007, but that retroactive benefits are not applicable.
               
               Michael M~
 Regional Chief Counsel
               
               By: ___________________________
 Anne von S~
 Assistant Regional Counsel