|

Deadbeat
Pa Snags Child's $500k
By Leonard
Greene
New York Post
July 26, 2006
Deadbeat dads have rights, too.
So
says a New Jersey judge, who yesterday ruled that an absentee father
from Staten Island is entitled to half his dead daughter's estate -
even though the dad never paid a penny of child support after
abandoning the kid, and spent virtually no time caring for the
severely disabled young woman while she was alive.
Jennifer Rogiers, 22, died
in September from lifelong complications from a
FREE MONEY: Ruben Martinez leaves court
debilitating
spinal-cord ailment, and left no
yesterday after winning half the estate of a
will. Her
father, Ruben Martinez, then
daughter he stiffed.
sued the
grieving mother for a stake of
Photo: Brian Branch Price
nearly $1
million that remained in a
alpractice settlement used for their
daughter's care.
Martinez's claim came down
to what was essentially a simple question: What is a father?
While acknowledging that
"biological relationships are not the exclusive determinant of
parenthood," Superior Court Judge Thomas Olivieri of Hudson County's
Chancery Division said, "Inheritance is not conditional on the
behaviors of a parent."
Jennifer's devoted
Weehawken mother - who in court papers called her former lover
nothing more than a "biological donor" - was outraged.
"It's not about the money,"
said Rosa Rogiers, 46. "It's about responsibilities."
Moments earlier, the livid
defendant confronted Martinez in the back of the courtroom and
castigated him in two languages.
"Will you look at my face?"
she demanded. "There's a God up there, and you're going to pay for
it."
Martinez's lawyer pulled
his client from the ugly scene as Rogiers' friends and relatives
spewed invectives at his back.
Outside the courtroom,
Martinez defended the verdict - and his sorry record as a father.
"You don't know half the
story," Martinez said. "I was there for my daughter. She [Rogiers]
is a liar."
Martinez's stake in the
remaining settlement money could be about $400,000, said Rogiers'
lawyer, Jeffrey Bloom.
Bloom appeared
flabbergasted by the decision.
"I define a parent as one
who takes care of a child, nurtures a child, supports a child,"
Bloom said. "Mr. Martinez abandoned this child. As a result of his
total lack of commitment, he should not be deemed a parent."
Martinez said he planned to
use the money to help put his other children through college.
Meanwhile, in addition to
the inheritance ruling, the judge also handed Martinez another rich
victory.
Rogiers had countersued
Martinez for 22 years of back child support. The judge said the
issue was now moot, since Jennifer is dead.
Martinez's paternity in the
estate case was never a question. In 1991 - two years after the
malpractice settlement - Martinez secured a declaration from a New
York family court that he was Jennifer's father.
Neither was it a question
that he never paid child support, though he claims he made offers,
despite his own financial struggles, that were refused.
A breach birth in 1983 left
Jennifer with a severe spinal-cord injury that kept her from
walking, gave her breathing problems and required her to be fed
through a tube.
Six years later, she was
awarded $2.5 million in a settlement that was held in trust and used
for her care. She died in November.
Rogiers did have one
victory during the court proceeding: Olivieri ordered the company
holding the trust fund to reimburse her for $300,000 in medical
expenses.
She is urging a new law
protecting malpractice settlements from deadbeat parents.
"Any man can make a child
and come back and say, 'Hello,' " Rogiers said. "I'm not going to
accept that decision at all."
[Index
to Articles]
|