Gleason v. Michlitsch
This text of 728 P.2d 965 (Gleason v. Michlitsch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Mother appeals a judgment in a filiation action that father brought regarding an eight-month old boy in mother’s custody. ORS 109.125. The parties agreed to those parts of the court’s judgment that declared father’s paternity, his support obligation, his visitation rights and mother’s continued custody. Mother challenges only the parts that direct that the child’s last name be changed from hers to the father’s and that allow father to claim the child as an income tax exemption in each year that his child support payments are current. Our review is de novo. ORS 109.135(1); ORS 19.125. We modify the judgment and affirm it as modified.
Mother’s first assignment is that the court erred when it provided for changing the child’s last name to Gleason. Although there is no specific statutory provision that prescribes the governing standard, we agree with the court that the correct standard is the best interests of the child. 1 The court concluded that it was in the best interests of the child that he bear his father’s last name:
“Using the best interest of the child as the criterion, I quite frankly fail to see where the best interest of the child is being served by denying the father’s name as the father of the child. He, as the father, has the same parental rights as though there had been a formal marriage here. Those are important rights.
“And it certainly would seem to me that if this child bore [the mother’s name] when the child knows his father’s name * * * and he associates with other children who use the — constantly use the father’s name, that I think this would work against the best interest of the child.
“And secondly the child goes to school. He knows who his father is. The father has expressed an interest in visiting with the child. He knows the father’s name * * *. He goes to school. He finds the other children in school bear the father’s name. And he is going to wonder about this and wonder why his name is not that of his father’s with attended psychological ill effects for the child.
“This child isn’t going to be done any disservice if it *691 doesn’t bear the same name as his half-sister. That is a very common occurrence in today’s society.”
Generally, we give weight to the decision of a trial court as to the best interests of a child when it has had the opportunity to view the witnesses and hear the testimony. McCoy and McCoy, 28 Or App 919, 562 P2d 207, 29 Or App 287, 563 P2d 738 (1977); see also Meier and Meier, 286 Or 437, 595 P2d 474 (1979). Here, however, the evidentiary record does not support the court’s conclusion that there would be “psychological ill effects” on the child or that it would otherwise not be in his best interests if he were to bear his mother’s last name and have to associate at school or elsewhere with children who bear their father’s last name.
Decisions from other jurisdictions emphasize that the identity of the custodial parent is an important factor in determining the relationship of the child’s best interests to the surname which it should bear. In Spence-Chapin Services v. Tedeno, 101 Misc 2d 485, 489, 421 NYS2d 297, 300 (1979), the court stated:
“[T]he significant consideration is that the mother has custody and it is she who will be the primary caretaking figure and who will make the major decisions for [the child]. Moreover, the court recognizes that children, as they grow older, generally prefer to use the name of the parent with whom they live.”
See also Petition of Schidlmeier by Koslof, 344 Pa Super 562, 569, 496 A2d 1249 (1985), where the court upheld a statutory provision that the choice of surname rests with the custodial parent if the parents are divorced or separated at the time of birth, because “[t]he custodial parent generally has the right to make major decisions affecting the best interests of a minor child.” The court’s judgment is modified to delete paragraph 5 that changes the child’s last name. 2
Mother’s second assignment is that the court erred in awarding the income tax dependency exemption to father. She *692 relies on IRC § 152(e). 3 Mother argues that, because IRC § 152(e)(1) (A) (iii) refers to parents who “live apart at all times during the last six months of the applicable calendar year,” it applies to parents who have never married and that, as the custodial parent, she is entitled to the exemption. IRC § 152(e), however, applies only to parents who are or have been married. See Dillard v. Commissioner, 47 TC Memo 919 n 3 (1984) (“Since petitioner [and the mother of his child] were never married, the provisions of section 152(e), relating to a child of divorced or separated parents, do not apply.”). IRC § 152(a)(1) defines a dependent as a child of the taxpayer for whom the taxpayer provides over one-half of the support during the calendar year. 4 In the circumstances here, the court should not have designated which party would receive the dependency exemption. The court predicted that father would provide over one-half of the child’s support and in paragraph 6 of the judgment awarded him the dependency exemption in each year that his child support payments were current. See ORS 109.103; ORS 107.105(l)(c)(F). 5 Whether father would *693 qualify to claim the federal income tax exemption, however, depends entirely on the application of federal income tax law to the actual facts. 6 . See Davis v. Fair, 707 SW2d 711 (Tex App 1986). 7
*694 Judgment modified by deleting paragraphs 5 and 6; affirmed as modified. Costs to mother.
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728 P.2d 965, 82 Or. App. 688, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gleason-v-michlitsch-orctapp-1986.