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24/03/05
Mothers Must Tell The Truth
Janet Albrechtsen
The
Australian
It has been called sex, lies and DNA. That
complex web snared Tony Abbott when, on Monday, he revealed that the son he was
reunited with just a few months ago was not his son. Abbott's anguish, his shock
and disappointment, as he faced cameras was only too real. Recall the beaming
Abbott when just a month ago he talked about "my boy" Daniel O'Connor.
It is impossible to imagine the even greater torment that O'Connor is now
confronting.
While the Abbott saga has mesmerised the
nation, other cases slide under the radar. This is a web that entraps more men
and children than we may care to believe. And when the tangled skein involves
deliberate deceit, the devastation is often worse.
Consider the case of Liam Magill. When his
wife Meredith gave birth to two babies, each born with blue eyes and blond hair,
Liam assumed they were his. He had no reason to think otherwise. He signed the
birth certificates as any new father does. He cared for the children, loved
them, cherished them as most fathers do. But Liam's world fell apart when he
discovered neither child was his.
Caught between a rock and a hard place, Liam,
who still loves the children, wanted Meredith to be held accountable for years
of dreadful deception. He went to court seeking damages for deceit -- recompense
for expenses he incurred and for the pain and suffering he endured. But last
Thursday, the Victorian Court of Appeal tossed out his claim, overturning an
earlier decision that awarded him $70,000 for paternity fraud.
Emotionally shattered, Liam will say only that
March 17, 2005, should be remembered as a day of infamy for Australia's legal
system. And perhaps it should. Before dismissing Liam as a disgruntled litigant,
these are the undisputed facts.
Liam and Meredith married on April 9, 1988.
The first of three children was born in April 1989. From September 1989 until
early 1995, Meredith had regular unprotected sex with a secret lover. The Court
of Appeal agreed that Meredith was "having more frequent sex with her lover
than ... her husband". On July 30, 1990, a son, Heath, was born. On
November 27, 1991, a daughter, Bonnie, was born. Meredith and Liam separated in
November 1992 and Liam made child support payments for more than five years. In
1995 Meredith admitted to Liam her concerns over paternity. In 1999 they agreed
to DNA tests and in April 2000 Liam learned the sad truth. Heath and Bonnie were
not his children.
Then last week Liam learned that the law will
not hold Meredith accountable for her deceit. Careful to say that the law of
deceit may apply to other cases of paternity fraud, the judges shied away from
finding it here. They said Liam was not induced to act on the deceit. It is a
surprising decision because it is hard to imagine a clearer case of a man
suffering loss through paternity deceit.
Feminists were delighted with the result. On
ABC Radio's PM program, Joanna Fletcher from the Victorian Women's Legal Service
described the litigation as an "ugly affair" that should never have
proceeded. "It's bad for children," she said. "You really have to
ask how damaging it must be for the children of this marriage to have the man
that they've always known as their father suing their [mother] for an injury and
for return of money spent on them ... really saying to them that he got no
benefit or joy out of his relationship with them."
She would say that. The VWLS funded a large
chunk of this long legal battle. While Liam sold his house to pay for the
litigation, federal and Victorian taxpayers funded Meredith. (And when that
dried up, Clayton Utz took up the case on a pro bono basis.)
The VWLS has argued that Meredith's defence
deserved to be funded by the public purse. But what precisely is the public
interest in defending paternity fraud? That women should be left alone to go
about their deceit without penalty, striving for a world without consequences?
If there is a public interest, it is one that says men have the right not to be
duped into playing dad.
Feminists who argue for special pleading for
women, who fight to lower the bar of responsibility for women, do nothing for
women's equality. Indeed, if feminism is reduced to this, expect many to turn
away. Every dollar spent defending deceit is a dollar not available for a more
worthy case.
More important, how does defending deceit
protect the interests of children? By denying men the right to know and by not
penalising the mother for deceit, we end up giving women the right to deceive.
That cannot be good for children.
Feminists seem to draw upon the interests of
children only when it suits them. Concerns about children were thin on the
ground when Kerry Melchior went to the High Court arguing that her healthy baby,
born after a botched sterilisation, was unwanted and a financial burden. She
said that although she loved her child, she should not have to pay for its
upkeep. The court agreed and awarded Melchior damages.
Clearly that case encourages parents to come
to court to belittle the birth and life of their child to boost their damages
claim.
To her credit, feminist Eva Cox joined
ethicists and psychologists who were concerned that this case labels a child as
a burden. But for others such as University of Sydney law professor Regina
Graycar, this was a woman correcting an injustice. Yet when Liam Magill claims
damages for deceit, we are told he is seeking revenge. Paternity fraud spawns
many victims. A father loses a child he thought was his. Children suffer as the
family they once knew collapses around them.
And women lose out, too. Cheryl King, Liam's
second wife, has had to pick up the pieces - emotional and financial - of the
deceit. In pure numbers, the extent of paternity fraud is staggering. Firms that
carry out DNA tests say that 20 to 30 per cent of DNA tests done for men who
have doubts about paternity reveal that they are not the biological father.
With a time bomb waiting to explode, we need
clear messages to remind women that deceiving men into fatherhood is
unacceptable. Last week federal Attorney-General Philip Ruddock introduced
legislation making it easier for men who discover they are not the father of a
child to recover child maintenance payments and property transferred in family
law settlements.
The next step is convincing courts to hold
women accountable for deceit over paternity.
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