Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:It’s not commonplace and a court is unlikely to order a DNA test because DNA tests are not conclusive of legal paternity.
It’s also probably a moot point from the nephews’ standpoint unless your friend wasn’t legally married to her husband. As long as they were legally married, in the event it were determined that he had no children, his entire estate would likely default to her.
They were legally married but after the birth of the 1st child.
Will the court demand a DNA test?
Probably not. As a general matter, courts are very reluctant to disturb presumptions of paternity. In this case, where the deceased never took steps to confirm paternity while he was alive, a court is likely to presume that was because he ultimately did not wish to challenge paternity and won’t take the self-interested word of his nephews that he would have wanted it.
I admit I’m a bit skeptical of this story, though, because if it were, your friend may have a cause of action against the funeral home (which is why the funeral home probably wouldn’t have allowed what supposedly happened).