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Laws in California are ever-changing. It is important that citizens remain informed about these changes. This article focuses on changes in the law that affect our children.
Contributing to Underage DrinkingCalifornia is clamping down on those who provide alcohol for minors. Per B&P C 25658, it is now a misdemeanor to buy alcohol for anyone who gives alcohol to a minor (the code previously made it illegal to purchase alcohol for a minor). Setting Aside Paternity JudgmentsMany of us who practice family law believed for some time that the limits placed on a person’s right to challenge paternity were unfair. Fortunately, recent legislation has modified the procedure in which parents may challenge paternity judgments. Family Code Sections 7645-7649.5 assert that the legal father, the mother, the child, or their legal representatives may file a motion to set aside or vacate a paternity judgment within two years after (1) the man learned or should have learned about the paternity proceedings or the judgment, whichever occurred first; (2) the child was born, if parentage was determined by a voluntary paternity declaration; or (3) the new section’s effective date (January 1, 2005), if a default judgment had already established paternity before that date. Confidentiality of Custody EvaluationsIt is well-known that many embarrassing facts or opinions about a parent go into the child custody evaluator’s report, which is kept within the court file. Inheritance Rights of Posthumously Artificially Conceived ChildrenAfter a person dies, the inheritance rights of any frozen egg or sperm deposits made by the decedent must be considered. The Probate code now has a law that spells out the inheritance rights of a child who was artificially conceived after a parent’s death with sperm or an egg deposited for that purpose.
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