D. R. S. v. R. S. H.

412 N.E.2d 1257, 1980 Ind. App. LEXIS 1803
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 2, 1980
DocketNo. 2-979A272
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 412 N.E.2d 1257 (D. R. S. v. R. S. H.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D. R. S. v. R. S. H., 412 N.E.2d 1257, 1980 Ind. App. LEXIS 1803 (Ind. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinions

BUCHANAN, Chief Judge.

CASE SUMMARY

Plaintiff D.R.S. appeals from a judgment in an action on a Voluntary Petition to Establish Paternity of Child and Provide for Its Support requiring her child to bear the surname of his biological father, claiming that the order was contrary to law, unsupported by the evidence, and an abuse of discretion.

We affirm.

FACTS

D.R.S. is the unwed mother of a one-year-old child, J. Ten days after J.’s birth, D.R.S. and the biological father, R.S.H., jointly filed a Voluntary Petition to Establish Paternity.

At the hearing, the parties stipulated that R.S.H. was the child’s father and that he would pay child support of twenty-five dollars per week. The parties asked the court to allocate medical expenses associated with the child’s birth, to establish visitation rights for the non-custodial father, and to determine whether J. should retain his mother’s maiden name or take the surname of his father.

After the trial judge indicated that he would be inclined to reduce support payments if the name were not changed, D.R.S. testified that she would forego all support if J. retained her surname. She maintained that because she has no plans to marry and would retain her maiden name even if she were to marry, there would be no potential for confusing J. She also testified that J.’s retention of her name would promote consistency because J. would be living with her.

R.S.H. testified that he had paid some support since J.’s birth and that he would be willing to pay one-half of the medical expenses already incurred along with one-half of all future medical bills not covered by insurance.1 He stated that he wished to have J. bear his surname.

The court ordered that R.S.H. pay twenty-five dollars per week as support, that he have visitation rights, that the parties split the costs of the action and medical expenses, and that J. subsequently be known by his father’s surname.

ISSUE

D.R.S. raises one issue:

Was the court’s order changing the child’s surname contrary to law, against the evidence, or an abuse of discretion?

DECISION

PARTIES’ CONTENTIONS-®.R.S. contends that the court’s action was erroneous because the law provides that an illegitimate child is to carry the mother’s name, and there was no evidence to support a change of name. Hence, she maintains that the court abused its discretion in ordering the change. R.S.H. responds that the law vests the court in a paternity action with the power to effect such a change.

CONCLUSION- The court’s action in changing the child’s name was neither contrary to law, against the evidence, nor an abuse of discretion.

D.R.S. leans heavily on certain Indiana statutes as preventing the trial judge from requiring J. to bear the name of his father. There is no Indiana case law on this precise point.

[1260]*1260Her main reliance is on Ind.Code § 31-4-1-8,2 which deals with the court’s powers in a paternity proceeding. That section of the law simply authorizes the parents of a child bom out of wedlock to file a voluntary joint petition requesting that the court establish the child’s paternity and make provision for its support. The court, after conducting a hearing, is to “make a finding and enter judgment and make an order in accordance therewith.” Id. Ind.Code § 31-4-1-19,3 covering the order in a paternity action, provides that “[i]f the verdict or finding be against the defendant, the court shall enter a judgment against him, and make an order which shall make adequate provision for the support of the child, taking into consideration the needs of the child and the ability of the defendant to pay.” D.R.S. argues that because the law on paternity actions is silent with respect to judicial discretion in general and name changes in particular, the legislature did not intend to authorize changing the child’s name in paternity proceedings. In short, she interprets these sections as an exclusive statement of the court’s powers in a paternity action, namely, to determine the issues of paternity and support.

D.R.S. construes other Indiana statutes as not permitting name changes in paternity actions. Ind.Code § 16-1-16-15 (1976), covering vital statistics, specifies that “[a] child born illegitimate shall be recorded under the name of the mother” (emphasis supplied). Other sections of the law authorize a change of surname and birth record for an illegitimate child following its parents’ marriage.4 These statutes, she says, taken together, amount to a legislative directive that an illegitimate child may assume the paternal surname only if its parents marry.

We decline to give the statutes the restrictive interpretation which D.R.S. proposes.5 It is true that neither Ind.Code § 31-4-1-8, which creates and prescribes the mode of proceeding in a paternity action, nor Ind.Code § 31-4-1-19, which describes the order to be entered in such an action, authorizes a change in the child’s [1261]*1261name. It' is equally true, however, that neither provision proscribes changing the child’s name in the context of a paternity proceeding. Those sections of the law which authorize a change of name and birth record after the parents of an illegitimate child marry do not purport to make marriage a condition precedent to changing the name or to provide the exclusive method for appending the unwed father’s surname to the child. The use of the word “recorded” in Ind.Code § 16-1-16-15 (1976), which requires that an illegitimate child be recorded under its mother’s name, refers only to the filing of a birth certificate with the local health officers: While this statute may be viewed as supporting the position that an illegitimate child traditionally takes its mother’s name at birth, it does not implicitly or explicitly prohibit a subsequent judicial determination that the child’s surname should be changed to that of its father. It seems to be designed to reach those situations in which only the mother is involved.

Having determined that no Indiana statute expressly forbids ordering a name change in a paternity proceeding, we turn to a discussion of the nature and purposes of the action to establish paternity in Indiana.

At common law, an illegitimate child was filius nullius, the son of no one, or fiiius populi, the son of the people. Truelove v. Truelove (1909), 172 Ind. 441, 86 N.E. 1018, 88 N.E. 516; Jackson v. Hocke (1908), 171 Ind. 371, 84 N.E. 830. See also 10 Am. Jur.2d Bastards § 8 (1963). The child had no legally recognized father or mother and, therefore, no legal rights.

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Bluebook (online)
412 N.E.2d 1257, 1980 Ind. App. LEXIS 1803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/d-r-s-v-r-s-h-indctapp-1980.