Rio v. Rio

132 Misc. 2d 316, 504 N.Y.S.2d 959, 1986 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2689
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 21, 1986
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 132 Misc. 2d 316 (Rio v. Rio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rio v. Rio, 132 Misc. 2d 316, 504 N.Y.S.2d 959, 1986 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2689 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

William R. Geiler, J.

Plaintiff moves for an order modifying a certificate of live birth issued for the infant issue of the marriage which was [317]*317filed with the New York State Department of Health on July 23, 1985. On said certificate, the child’s name was listed as Krystle DeSalvio-Rio, DeSalvio being the mother’s maiden name and Rio being the father’s surname. Plaintiff seeks an order amending said birth certificate to eliminate the mother’s maiden name therefrom, and directing defendant to refrain from using any surname other than the father’s for this child on any school, religious or other documents.

The child in question, Krystle, was born on July 18, 1985, at which time plaintiff was not residing at the marital residence. In fact, he contends that defendant kept the actual event of the birth of the daughter a secret from him. Also, he contends that she neither consulted him nor attempted to gain his consent when she gave the child the hyphenated surname. Finally, he contends that it is a time-honored right that a newborn child born in wedlock bear the surname of the father. Defendant, on the other hand, in addition to asserting her rights to equal protection and equal parenting, contends that she never, herself, adopted her husband’s surname upon marrying him, and that plaintiff is not supporting the child. It further appears that plaintiff was present at the time of the child’s birth.

For the reasons set forth below, the court denies the instant motion in all respects.

Most American children born in wedlock are given their father’s surname. (Note, Like Father, Like Child: The Rights of Parents in Their Children’s Surnames, 70 Va L Rev 1303, 1304 [1984] [hereinafter referred to as Note, Like Father, Like Child].) However, at common law, no one has a property right to a personal name such that one can keep another from using it. (Arnold, Personal Names, 15 Yale LJ 227-228 [1905-1906].) Consistent with the right to change one’s name is the right not to change it at marriage as many women traditionally have done. (See, e.g., Bysiewicz & MacDonnell, Married Women’s Surnames, 5 Conn L Rev 598 [1973]; Daum, Right of Married Women to Assert Their Own Surnames, 8 U Mich JL Ref 63 [1974]; Karst, "Discrimination So Trivial”: A Note on Law and Symbolism of Women’s Dependency, 35 Ohio St LJ 546 [1974].)

Most courts recognize that the father has no common-law right to determine his child’s surname and find support for the paternal name presumption in natural law. In name change cases, for example, courts use the idea of natural law [318]*318in two ways. Some courts speak of the father’s "primary” or "fundamental” right. "The father * * * has a natural right to have his son bear his name”. (Matter of Baldini, 17 Misc 2d 195 [City Ct, Bronx County 1959]; see, Worms v Worms, 252 Cal App 2d 130, 60 Cal Rptr 88 [1967]; West v Wright, 263 Md 297, 283 A2d 401 [1971]; De Vorkin v Foster, 66 NYS2d 54 [Sup Ct, Kings County 1946]; Matter of Yessner, 61 Misc 2d 174 [Civ Ct, Kings County 1969]; Young v Board of Educ., 114 NYS2d 693 [Sup Ct, Kings County 1952] ["fundamental right”]; Schoenberg v Schoenberg, 57 NYS2d 283 [1945], mod 269 App Div 1048 [2d Dept 1945], affd 296 NY 583 [1946] ["primary right”].) Other courts refer to the father’s "time-honored right” (see, e.g., Matter of Wachsberger, NYLJ, June 28, 1982, p 16, col 2 [Sup Ct, Nassau County, Burke, J.]) and use the concept of natural law to convey the understanding that any practice universal among human societies must be innate, a "law of nature”. Commentators contend, however, that the confidence of State courts that the paternal name is a right confirmed by common practices is misplaced. (Note, Like Father, Like Child, op. cit., at 1321; MacDougall, Right of Women to Name Their Children, 3 Law & Inequality 91 [1985]; Note, Parents’ Selection of Children’s Surnames, 51 Geo Wash L Rev 583 [1983].)

Examination into the naming practices of Western civilization reveals that names ordinarily express kinship, but not necessarily paternity. Matronymics, names derived from the maternal line, have been employed in several Western cultures, including modern Spain (see, Secretary of Commonwealth v City Clerk, 373 Mass 178, 180, 366 NE2d 717, 720 [1977]) and medieval England (Reaney, Dictionary of British Surnames, at xliii-xlv [1958]). Medieval Arabs and Jews also used matronymics (see, Goitein, Nicknames as Family Names, 90 J Am Oriental Socy 517, 522-523 [1970]). The Chinese characters for "to have a surname” is composed of the characters for "woman” and "to be born” (Defrancis, Character Text for Beginning Chinese, at 5, 11, 99 [1964]). In England, at least as late as the 14th century, both sons and daughters adopted their mother’s surnames, often upon succeeding to their mother’s estate or in the hope of doing so (Reaney, Origin of English Surnames, at 84 [1968]). Men also adopted their wives’ surnames if the couple inherited property from the woman’s family (Homans, English Villagers of Thirteenth Century, at 187 [1941]). The children of such couples, presumably, also took their mother’s surnames (Note, Like Father, Like Child, [319]*319op. cit., at 1322). Concise and fascinating histories of the practices in naming children are to be found, in addition to the above-cited works and law review articles, in two early New York decisions, Matter of Snook (2 Hilt 566 [1859]) and Smith v United States Cas. Co. (197 NY 420 [1910]).

Referring to what is perceived to be the Anglo-American custom, some courts eschew natural law and simply rely on the conservative philosophy that a custom should not be discontinued save in extraordinary circumstances (see, e.g., Carroll v Johnson, 263 Ark 280, 286, 565 SW2d 10, 14 [1978]; Montandon v Montandon, 242 Cal App 2d 886, 891, 52 Cal Rptr 43, 46 [1966]; West v Wright, 263 Md 297, 300, 283 A2d 401, 402 [1971], supra). It has been held that courts may take judicial notice of well-known facts concerning the habits and activities of human beings (Richardson, Evidence § 42 [10th ed 1973]). Among these well-known facts is the practically universal custom of giving a child the father’s surname. Equally well known is the fact that a surname provides a means of identifying the child with the father’s family (Bennett v Northcutt, 544 SW2d 703, 707 [Tex Civ App 1976]).

In New York, it has been held that although a father has a recognized interest in having his child bear his surname, neither parent has a superior right to determine the surname of the child, and the question is always whether the best interests of the child will be served by a proposed change (Cohan v Cunningham, 104 AD2d 716 [4th Dept 1984]).

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Bluebook (online)
132 Misc. 2d 316, 504 N.Y.S.2d 959, 1986 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2689, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rio-v-rio-nysupct-1986.