
Originally Posted by
kermitthefrog
I raised and took care of this child, this child knows me as daddy and has no clue of anything else.
Sorry but it does not have any legal values in TN and/ probably/ NC.
I DO NOT SAY IT IS RIGHT OR WRONG. IT IS JUST THE LAW.

Originally Posted by
ScottGem
Depending on where you are, it may be too late for her to challenge paternity.
Not too late!
It depends on which is "the home state"- Tennessee or North Carolina. By the way if she files for paternity determination, you will be out of luck
According to TN laws the biological father is always the legal father, and it was upheld many times by TN Supreme court/ In re-T.K.Y. is the first and most important case./
In FRANKLIN v. FRANKLIN,/ February 11, 2008 Session TN Ct App/, the legal non-biological father who had been the primary custodian of a child, lost his rights for custody because he was not connected biologically to the child.
/After a trial, the Trial court entered a Final Decree of Divorce, inter alia, granting Husband a divorce; holding that Freeman is the biological father of J.A.F. but that Husband is the legal father... and awarding primary residential custody of both minor children to Husband with Wife to have co-parenting time... We reverse the termination of Freeman's parental
rights to J.A.F. reverse the Trial Court's order granting custody of J.A.F. to Husband, vacate that portion of the Trial Court's order distributing the marital home, and remand this case to the Trial Court to effectuate the custody transfer of J.A.F. to Wife.. /
North Carolina laws:
§ 49‑12.1. Legitimation when mother married.
(a) The putative father of a child born to a mother who is married to another man may file a special proceeding to legitimate the child. The procedures shall be the same as those specified by G.S. 49‑10, except that the spouse of the mother of the child shall be a necessary party to the proceeding and shall be properly served. A guardian ad litem shall be appointed to represent the child if the child is a minor.
(b) The presumption of legitimacy can be overcome by clear and convincing evidence.
§ 49‑14
(a) The paternity of a child born out of wedlock may be established by civil action at any time prior to such child's eighteenth birthday.
(d) If the action to establish paternity is brought more than three years after birth of a child or is brought after the death of the putative father, paternity shall not be established in a contested case without evidence from a blood or genetic marker test