The views expressed in “Libraries & Legal Research,” as well as other expressions of opinions published in the Bar Journal from time to time, do not necessarily state or reflect the official position of the State Bar of Michigan, nor does their publication constitute an endorsement of the views expressed. They are the opinions of the authors and are intended not to end discussion, but to stimulate thought about significant issues affecting the legal profession, the making of laws, and the adjudication of disputes.
ENDNOTES
1. Anthony, In the Name of the Father: Compulsion, Tradition, and Law in the Lost History of Women’s Surnames, 25 J Juris 59, 61 (2015) and Pine, The Story of Surnames (Vermont: C. E. Tuttle Co, 1967).
2. In the Name of the Father at 63-64.
3. Baker & Green, There is No Such Thing As a ‘Legal Name,’ 53 Columbia Hum Rights L Rev 129, 140 (2021); Rappleye v Rappleye, 183 Mich App 396, 398-99; 454 NW2d 231 (1990); and Piotrowski v Piotrowski, 71 Mich App 213, 216-17; 247 NW2d 354 (1976).
4. Social Security Admin, Evidence Requirements to Process a Name Change on the SSN, RM 10212.015, POMS (2012) [https://perma.cc/J2VW-WVSH]. All websites cited in this article were accessed January 11, 2023.
5. MCL 711.1(1) and MCR 3.613.
6. MCL 711.3.
7. MCL 711.1(2).
8. Id. For more on what evidence suffices to rebut the presumption, compare In re Pearson, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued March 25, 2021 (Docket No 352377) with In re Morgan, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued April 14, 2011 (Docket No 296678).
9. MCL 711.1(5) & (7).
10. E.g., In re Warshefski, 331 Mich App 83; 951 NW2d 90 (2020); Kratzer v Lambright, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued May 20, 2003 (Docket No 235336); and Rappleye v Rappleye.
11. MCL 711.1(6).
12. Id.
13. MCL 711.2 and Legal Name and Gender Marker Changes, The Gender and Sexuality Campus Ctr, Mich State Univ [https://perma.cc/SV2C-XBNP].
14. License or ID name correction, Mich Dept of State [https:// perma.cc/5CJQ-UJ3K]; Social Security Admin, Evidence of Name Change based on a US Ceremonial Marriage, RM 10212.025, POMS (2012) [https://perma.cc/S4NT-LED2]; US Dept of State, Change of Name by Marriage, 8 FAM 403.1-4(C) (2021) [https:// perma.cc/2HV6-JJ7X]; and Name Change Request Form, SBM [https://perma. cc/DA4V-ATBC].
15. Social Security Admin, Request for Six State Legal Opinion on Laws Concerning Changing a Name in the Event of Marriage — REPLY, PR 14- 075, POMS (2014) [https://perma.cc/7A9B-PBK4].
16. Emens, Changing Name Changing: Framing Rules and the Future of Marital Names, 74 U Chi L R 761, 765 (2007).
17. Social Security Admin, Evidence Required to Process a Name Change on the SSN based on Marriage, Civil Union and Domestic Partnership, RM 10212.055, POMS (2010) [https://perma.cc/D9VM-8X95] and US Dept of State, Acceptable Name Changes by Marriage, 8 FAM 403.1-4(C)(1) (2021) [https://perma.cc/2HV6-JJ7X].
18. Steadman, “That Name is Dead to Me”: Reforming Name Change Laws to Protect Transgender and Nonbinary Youth, 55 U Mich J L Reform 1, 3-5 (2021).
19. Id. at 23-28 (gathering examples) and Judge Refuses to Grant Legal Name Change, ACLU Mich [https://perma. cc/3UXR-5YAS].
20. Primeaux, What’s in a Name? For Transgender People, Everything, 91 NY St B Assoc J 40, 41 (2019).
21. Id. at 42.
22. MCL 552.391 (divorce); There is No Such Thing As a ‘Legal Name,’ 53 Columbia Hum Rights L Rev at 148-52 (immigration); and Shakargy, You Name It: On the Cross-Border Regulation of Names, 68 Am J Comp L 647 (2020).
23. Changing Name Changing, 74 U Chi L R at 817-18.