Re: the Name Change of Jane Doe, Mary Doe, a Minor, and Baby Doe, a Minor

988 N.E.2d 1264, 2013 WL 2643790, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 281
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 13, 2013
Docket49A02-1211-MI-894
StatusPublished

This text of 988 N.E.2d 1264 (Re: the Name Change of Jane Doe, Mary Doe, a Minor, and Baby Doe, a Minor) 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
Re: the Name Change of Jane Doe, Mary Doe, a Minor, and Baby Doe, a Minor, 988 N.E.2d 1264, 2013 WL 2643790, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 281 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

BAKER, Judge.

Here, we are presented with a tragic set of circumstances. A mother of two young children (Mother) fled Missouri to escape horrible physical and sexual abuse from the father of her youngest child. Mother traveled to Indiana where she secured an order of protection. Unfortunately, Father was persistent in his pursuit of Mother, and he violated the order of protection. Father was placed on probation for violating the protective order, and his conditions included GPS monitoring.

Mother and her children lived in a domestic violence shelter, but Father found her, and the domestic violence shelter obtained an order of protection to keep Father away from the premises. Father still managed to abduct Mother twice; however, she escaped both times. At this point, the Department of Child Services (DCS) intervened and determined that the children would be placed with Mother permanently. Father’s whereabouts are currently unknown.

Mother filed a petition to have her name and the names of her children anonymously changed because she is terrified that Father will find them. Indiana Code section 34-28-2-3 requires that all petitions for a name change be published in a nearby newspaper, which Mother does not want so that she can maintain anonymity and safety. During a hearing on the petition, the trial court suggested utilizing Indiana Administrative Rule 9 to admit important evidence into the record while still protecting the identities of Mother and her children. Nevertheless, Rule 9 was not used, and the petition was denied.

We conclude that given these facts and the current state of the law, Mother’s best option would have been to utilize Rule 9, specifically Rules 9(G) and (H) to try to admit essential evidence into the record and perhaps effectuate the name changes anonymously. Although we sympathize with Mother’s difficult situation, because Mother did not employ this strategy, and we do not know what its outcome would have been, we affirm the decision of the trial court.

FACTS

Because of the desire to maintain anonymity, the record is fairly sparse; however, Mother appears to be the victim of serious domestic abuse. Indeed, according to Mother, she was subjected to physical and sexual abuse so extreme that she had to be hospitalized. Although Mother met Father in Missouri, she relocated with her two children, Mary Doe and Baby Doe, to Indiana and obtained an ex parte order of protection. Father was the legal father of Baby Doe “by way of Paternity.” Appellant’s Br. p. 2.

*1266 Father violated the protective order and was convicted of class D felony intimidation and class A misdemeanor domestic battery and sentenced to 450 days of probation, including GPS monitoring. A no-contact order was issued against Father as a condition of his probation.

Mother and her children resided in a domestic violence shelter. Father attempted to contact Mother on several occasions and tried to visit the domestic violence shelter where Mother resided. Consequently, the domestic violence shelter obtained a no-contact order against Father to prevent him from approaching the premises.

Mother obtained housing through the shelter’s Permanent Supportive Housing Program. Notwithstanding these measures, Father found and abducted Mother from her new residence. Mother eventually managed to escape with the assistance from law enforcement, but by the time Mother was found, her lease was in process of eviction due to abandonment.

Mother and presumably the children sought refuge in another domestic violence protection shelter and relocated to another residence for a brief period of time until Father removed his GPS anklet while still on probation. Father found Mother again, but fortunately, she was able to escape. Father’s whereabouts are currently unknown.

Because of the extensive amount of abuse that Mother suffered and the children’s exposure to it, the DCS intervened. The DCS determined that Mary and Baby Doe would be placed with Mother permanently and requested termination of Father’s parental rights.

Mother has sought numerous remedies, including requesting a new social security number and placement on the Attorney General’s Address Confidentiality Program. Nevertheless, Father managed to locate her. Although it is not clear from the record, Father somehow has access to various methods of locating individuals, including methods used by credit reporting agencies to locate debtors.

Mother is terrified that Father will locate her and cause grave harm to her and her children again. To this end, on May 80, 2012, Mother and her children (collectively, “the Appellants”) filed a joint petition for anonymous name change, requesting to anonymously change their names, or in the alternative, to change their names by way of a sealed record and to waive the statutory requirement of publication under Indiana Code section 34-28-2-8.

A hearing on the name change petition was held on September 5, 2012, whereby the Appellants submitted their memorandum of law. The trial court denied the petition.

The trial court held a status hearing on September 19, 2012, to determine how the Appellants wanted to preserve the record on appeal. The Appellants’ counsel maintained that Father was acquiring information regarding Mother through family and contacts at Wells Fargo and perhaps other agencies. At that point the following colloquy occurred between the Appellants’ counsel and the trial court:

THE COURT: And how would that change if her name was changed?
MS. GRISSMER: If her name were changed, he would not be able to track her at all through any credit bureau reporting agencies. She would be able to obtain a new Social Security number and essentially a new identity, so it would totally ...
THE COURT: But he can still track— or try to track her through her family, right?
*1267 MS. GRISSMER: He can try. But she would be able to relocate much easier and obtain a new address and a completely new identity.
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MS. GRISSMER: ... I do know that under the CHINS proceedings, his rights were terminated. I think there were some issues regarding service of process on the father 1 .... I would respectfully like to refrain from entering the documentation into the record, if that may serve as clarification for the Court.
THE COURT: Well I don’t — if you’re not going to admit them as exhibits, I don’t know how I can base any decision that I have on them.
MS. GRISSMER: Alright.
THE COURT: There are obviously provisions under Administrative Rule 9, to admit them in the proper manner, but absent that I can’t consider them, so ... Do you have anything else you want to present ma’am?
MS. GRISSMER:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
988 N.E.2d 1264, 2013 WL 2643790, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/re-the-name-change-of-jane-doe-mary-doe-a-minor-and-baby-doe-a-minor-indctapp-2013.