The specific legal challenge in the case was based on whether Michigan's child support laws apply to men and women equally. If not, then it was argued by Dubay that they violate
Equal Protection. Jeffrey Cojocar, Dubay's
attorney, maintained that Michigan does not force women to make child support payments for children that they do not want to parent, and accordingly, men should not have to either. The argument made by the state of Michigan, as well as by the
National Organization for Women and the Association for Children for Enforcement of Support, was that the needs of the child for support from both parents outweigh any of the circumstances surrounding the
birth. The argument for why the case paralleled the
Roe v. Wade ruling by the
United States Supreme Court was that in
Roe v. Wade, it was decided that women have the ability to decline parenthood in the event of an
unintended pregnancy. This case was claimed to be about giving men that same reproductive choice, by offering the possibility of a "
financial abortion". Additional issues involved in the case were whether a man should have responsibility placed on him when his decisions were based on misleading information provided by someone else about her ability or intentions to have a child, and whether states pursue men too aggressively for child support payments due to the financial incentives they have to avoid having to provide
public assistance. ==Legal action==