Unwilling father tests men's rights
Hell...I'm no legal expert and even I can tell you that his case doesn't have a chance.
They had sex. She got pregnant. She sued for child support. Now, he's suing back, contending that men have a constitutional right to "avoid procreation."
With the suit, Matthew Dubay, 25, of Saginaw, Mich., becomes the public face of a "men's rights" movement that contends men should have the same ability as women to decide whether to have children.
Supporters of the movement are calling the case "Roe vs. Wade for men"--a precedent-setting case that could define a man's right to choose parenthood.
The case is the first to assert a constitutional freedom to "choose not to be a father" under the equal protection clause, said Dubay's attorney, Jeffery Cojocar.
Child support isn't the only issue at stake: Dubay doesn't want any of the other legal or emotional responsibilities that come with parenthood, Cojocar explained.
[...]
In the fall of 2004, he had a discussion with his then-girlfriend. Dubay told her he wasn't ready to have kids, according to the legal complaint. That's fine; I'm infertile and I'm using birth control just in case, she allegedly responded.
When the woman found herself with child, she was unwilling to terminate the pregnancy. She gave birth to a baby girl and then obtained a court order requiring Dubay to pay $500 a month in child support.
Dubay thus joined the ranks of men who argue they were duped into having children they never wanted and then forced to assume financial responsibilities for which they were unprepared.
It's an old story, and one the courts have been very clear on, said Bruce Boyer, director of the child law clinic at Loyola University Chicago School of Law. The child's interest in receiving support, he said, overrides any interests the father may have.
"I can understand why people might be sympathetic to Mr. Dubay if he was duped into becoming a father," Boyer said. But if the child is his--as is the case--"this shouldn't be about him and his rights; it should be about this child and the child's needs."
Hell...I'm no legal expert and even I can tell you that his case doesn't have a chance.