Matter of Doe (G.I.C.R.)
This text of 2025 NY Slip Op 25133 (Matter of Doe (G.I.C.R.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Civil Court Of The City Of New York, Queens County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
| Matter of Doe (G.I.C.R.) |
| 2025 NY Slip Op 25133 |
| Decided on June 4, 2025 |
| Civil Court Of The City Of New York, Queens County |
| Kagan, J. |
| Published by New York State Law Reporting Bureau pursuant to Judiciary Law § 431. |
| This opinion is uncorrected and subject to revision before publication in the printed Official Reports. |
Decided on June 4, 2025
In the Matter of the Application of Jane Doe, as Parent, For Leave to Change the Name of G.I.C.R. to I.R.M.
|
Index No. NC-1435-24/QU
Petitioner
Pro Se
Mark Kagan, J.
The petitioner, the mother and natural guardian of the subject infant has moved seeking to change the infant's name. The infant was born in 2016 in Queens County. On January 29, 2025 the court denied the petition with leave to renew on the grounds the petitioner had failed to serve the non-petitioning parent. The petitioner has now refiled the petition and provided an affidavit which states that she wishes to change the name of her daughter but is reluctant to contact the infant's father since the relationship between the two parents is strained. She further asserts that she does not know where he currently lives and, in any event, does not want him to know about the name change and in fact does not want him to know anything about her life or the life of their daughter. She also submitted a restraining order that was issued by the Family Court of Queens County on September 2, 2020 which prohibited the non-petitioning parent from any contact with the infant or the petitioner. The order of protection expired on September 2, 2022. The petitioner requests the court dispense with any notice requirements to which the non-petitioning parent is entitled and approve the name change.
The question that must be addressed is whether the court can approve of the infant's name change considering these facts.
Civil Rights Law §62(1) states that a petition to change the name of an infant "must be served" upon both parents of the infant. The statute contains no exception when such service can be avoided unless the non-petitioning parent cannot be located. Thus, the statute states that "if it appears to the satisfaction of the court that a person required to be given notice by this section cannot be located with due diligence within the state, and that such person has no known address without the state, then the court may dispense with notice or require notice to be given to [*2]such persons and in such manner as the court thinks proper" (id). The petitioning parent must present evidence he or she has satisfied the burden to dispense with notice (see, Application of DeJesus, 44 Misc 2d 833, 254 NYS2d 23 [Civil Court of the City of New York, New York County 1964]). Merely asserting, without any proof, that the non-petitioning parent cannot be located with any diligence is insufficient to dispense with service (id).
Although it appears from the plain text of the statute that in all other instances service upon the non-petitioning parent is required, courts have relaxed the service requirement in various contexts. For example, in In re M.M., 2 Misc 3d 747, 771 NYS2d 315 [Supreme Court Rensselaer County 2003] the court dispensed with the notice requirement where the petitioning parent presented credible evidence the non-petitioning parent presented a safety threat to the petitioning parent and the infant. The court reasoned that although Civil Rights Law §62(1) required notice to all parents, Civil Rights Law §64-a allows the court to dispense with the publication requirements of the name change if to do so would "jeopardize such applicant's personal safety" (id). The court explained that it serves "no useful purpose" to require service of the name change request upon a parent that poses a safety risk only to dispense with the publication requirements to protect the applicant from those same risks. Again, in In re Doe, 3 Misc 3d 648, 773 NYS2d 215 [Civil Court of the City of New York, New York County 2003] the court applied similar reasoning holding that if a parent could dispense with the publication requirements of Civil Rights Law §64-a then service of the underlying petition would "illogically permit perpetration of the very threats to physical safety" (id).
First, in Thompkins v. Hunter, 149 NY 117, 43 NE 532 [1896] the Court of Appeals explained that when interpreting a statute "resort must be had to the natural signification of the words employed, and if they have a definite meaning, which involves no absurdity or contradiction, there is no room for construction, and courts have no right to add to or take away from that meaning" (id). Thus, "a statute must be read and given effect as it is written by the Legislature, not as the court may think it should or would have been written if the Legislature had envisaged all the problems and complications which might arise in the course of its administration" (Lawrence Construction Corporation v. State, 293 NY 634, 59 NE2d 630 [1944]). Therefore, when a statute is not ambiguous "a court should not attempt to cure an omission in the statute by supplying what it believes should have been put there by the Legislature" (Prego v. City of New York, 147 AD2d 165, 541 NYS2d 995 [2d Dept., 1989]). As noted, Civil Rights Law §62(1) requires notice of a name change of an infant upon the non-petitioning parent. Civil Rights Law §64-a allows dispensing with the publication requirement if certain privacy interests are demonstrated. Consequently, the notice statute has inadvertently failed to provide a mechanism to avoid serving a parent who may violate the same privacy concerns of the infant. However, the court is simply unable to allow the petitioning parent to avoid serving the non-petitioning parent. To the extent an apparent anomaly exists in the statutory scheme it must be addressed by the Legislature. Furthermore, any anomaly is tempered by the reality that service is required upon one individual, namely the non-petitioning parent. While that parent may, in some circumstances, pose some threat to the safety or privacy of the infant, no exception dispensing with service has been carved out by the statute. The exception to the publication requirement, by contrast, applies to anyone posing any sort of danger to the infant or anyone who may violate the privacy concerns of the infant, not just one parent. The much broader reach of these potential harms results in a statutorily sanctioned method in which the publication requirement can be avoided. The safety concerns serving the non-petitioning [*3]parent are obviously limited by the singular reach of the notice. In any event, as noted, only the Legislature can fill in statutory gaps to remedy perceived deficiencies.
Second, even if the court could dispense with the notice requirement upon a showing such notice could endanger the infant, no such showing has been made at all. The petitioning parent has not presented any evidence the non-petitioning parent poses any risk of harm. Rather, the petitioning parent merely wishes to have nothing to do with her former spouse and seeks to avoid notifying him of the proposed name change.
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2025 NY Slip Op 25133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-doe-gicr-nycivctqueens-2025.