Landmark Cases in Adoption
Bobo v. Jewell (1988), 38 Ohio St.3d 330, 528 N.E.2d 180.
Upon the child's birth, the unwed mother gave the child her surname, omitting the father's name from the birth certificate. The natural father sought a parentage order in juvenile court, requesting the child's surname be changed to his surname. The court ordered the change of name and ordered amendment of the birth certificate to reflect the name change. Did the juvenile court, as a common pleas court, have jurisdiction to do that?
(1) The juvenile court's jurisdiction, including subject matter jurisdiction, is limited to that dictated by R.C. chapter 2151.1R.C. 2151.07; In re Writ of Habeas Corpus for Baker (1996), 116 Ohio App.3d 580, 582 (10th Dist.).
(2) Applications to change minors' names shall be filed in probate court.2R.C. 2717.01.
(3) When determining parentage, the juvenile court could make any other provision in its order in "the best interest of the child," including ordering a new birth certificate for the child to reflect the judgment.3R.C. 3111.13(B) and (C).
The juvenile court could determine the child's surname after finding the parent-child relationship because R.C. 3111.13 (parentage order statute) let the court make any provision in its order that served "the best interest of the child," including ordering a new birth certificate to reflect the judgment. That denoted legislative recognition that a common pleas court could order the child's name changed. Because establishing parentage profoundly impacted the child's relationship with both parents, and the issue of the child's surname arose from that newly-recognized relationship, the juvenile court could order a child's name changed.4Bobo, at 334.
I believe the court erred. The statutes have remained substantially the same since Bobo.
R.C. 3111.13 still lets the juvenile court make orders in the child's best interest relating to the parentage judgment and order a new birth record to reflect the judgment. But that does not broaden the court's subject matter jurisdiction. A complaint to find a statute unconstitutional under the Declaratory Judgment Act, for example, may be brought in any court of record. But which court of record may hear the complaint depends on the subject matter of the challenged statute.5Malloy v. Westlake (1977), 52 Ohio St.2d 103, 105; State ex rel. Foreman v. Bellefontaine Municipal Court (1967), 12 Ohio St.2d 26, 28.
R.C. 3111.13(C) deals with parentage. The order the juvenile court makes in the child's interests under that statute must still fall under the juvenile court's jurisdiction dictated by Chapter 2151. That does not include name changes. Had the legislature wanted to give the juvenile court authority to change names in parentage actions, it would have said so directly. Courts must abide by R.C. 2717.01 (name change applications shall be filed in the probate court) no matter how inefficient that may be. Otherwise we blur the lines between the governmental branches on the fundamental question of courts' subject matter jurisdiction. The precedent allows for similar opportunistic loopholes in more harmful contexts.
The Supreme Court also erred logically. Parentage deals with establishing a parent-child relationship. Upon proper request, the court allocates parental rights and responsibilities. But names are for identification. How a name will effect the parent-child relationship, while a vital concern, relates only tangentially to the parents' relationship with, and rights and responsibilities regarding, the child. And the need to determine a child's ultimate name is typically less urgent than the need to resolve parental rights, obligations, and relationships. Because a child's name does not define or establish a parental relationship—much less a parental right or responsibility—changing the child's name falls outside the "best interest" context of R.C. 3111.13(C).
The juvenile court's authority to order a new birth certificate to reflect the parentage judgment, or a mother leaving the father off of the birth certificate, does not change that reasoning. Adding a father's name to a birth certificate differs fundamentally from changing a child's identity as reflected by the birth certificate. The juvenile court had the power to order the father's name added to the birth certificate, but not to order the child's name altered on it. Absent an expressly stated exception in the statutes about jurisdiction, the court should have held that only the probate court could order a child's name changed. The procedural efficiency gained from enhancing the juvenile court's jurisdiction did not outweigh the legal instability and confusion that has resulted from Bobo.
In Sabin v. Kern,600-LW-2540 (4th). for example, the juvenile court ordered a child's name changed despite the parent-child relationship allegedly having been determined separately by a state agency. The dissent argued that, because the mother raised the name change issue after a custody action "counter-claim" by the father under a juvenile statute, the existence of the parent-child relationship was not at issue. Thus, R.C. 3111.13(C) was not implicated, depriving the juvenile court of authority to entertain the name change motion.7Id., Harsha, J., dissenting. The majority did not address that concern.
And in Bowen v. Thomas,8(1995), 102 Ohio App.3d 196. the third district held that the domestic relations court lacked jurisdiction to hear the request of the divorcing father--who was listed on the birth certificate--to change the child's surname because the request came after the referee's report. Moreover, a married mother could register the child with any surname she chose on the birth certificate, which she had done.9Id., at 203 citing R.C. 3705.09(F).
Courts and parents stand confused about when juvenile or domestic relations courts can change minors' names. Construing statutes strictly avoids that confusion and inconsistency.