
|
Michigan
Michigan Law
University of Michigan Documents Center
http://www.lib.umich.edu/govdocs/michlaw.html
Michigan Name Change Law
Michigan Compiled Laws
711.1. Change of name; procedure, minors Sec. 1.
(1) The family division of the circuit court, or until
January 1, 1998, the probate court, for a county may enter an order to
change the name of a person who has been a resident of the county for not
less than 1 year and who in accordance with subsection (2) petitions in
writing to the court for that purpose showing a sufficient reason for the
proposed change and that the change is not sought with any fraudulent
intent. If the person who petitions for a name change has a criminal record,
the person is presumed to be seeking a name change with a fraudulent intent.
The burden of proof is on a petitioner who has a criminal record to rebut
the presumption. The court shall set a time and place for hearing and order
publication as provided by supreme court rule.
(2) A person who is 22 years of age or older and who
petitions to have his or her name changed shall have 2 complete sets of his
or her fingerprints taken at a local police agency. The fingerprints, along
with a copy of the petition and the required processing fees, shall be
forwarded to the department of state police. The department of state police
shall compare those fingerprints with its records and shall forward a
complete set of fingerprints to the federal bureau of investigation for a
comparison with the records available to that agency. The department of
state police shall report to the court in which the petition is filed the
information contained in the department's records with respect to any
pending charges against the petitioner or any record of conviction of the
petitioner and shall report to the court similar information obtained from
the federal bureau of investigation. If there are no pending charges against
the petitioner or any record of conviction against the petitioner, the
department of state police shall destroy its copy of the petitioner's
fingerprints. The court shall not act upon the petition for a name change
until the department of state police reports the information required by
this subsection to the court.
(3) If the court enters an order to change the name of a
person who has a criminal record, the court shall forward the order to the
central records division of the Michigan state police and to 1 or more of
the following: (a) The depart- ment of corrections if the person named in
the order is in prison or on parole or has been imprisoned or released from
parole in the immediately preceding 2 years. (b) The sheriff of the county
in which the person named in the order was last convicted if the person was
incarcerated in a county jail or released from a county jail within the
immediately preceding 2 years. (c) The court that has jurisdiction over the
person named in the order if the person named in the order is under the
jurisdiction of the family division of the circuit court, or until January
1, 1998, the probate court, or has been discharged from the jurisdiction of
that court within the immediately preceding 2 years.
(4) The court may permit a person having the same name,
or a similar name to that which the petitioner proposes to assume, to
intervene in the proceeding for the purpose of showing fraudulent intent.
(5) Except as provided in subsection (7), if the
petitioner is a minor, the petition shall be signed by the mother and father
jointly; by the surviving parent if 1 is deceased; if both parents are
deceased, by the guardian of the minor; or by1 of the minor's parents if
there is only 1 legal parent available to give consent. If either parent has
been declared mentally incompetent, the petition may be signed by the
guardian for that parent. The written consent to the change of name of a
minor 14 years of age or older, signed by the minor in the presence of the
court, shall be filed with the court before any order changing the name of
the minor is entered. If the court considers the child to be of sufficient
age to express a preference, the court shall consult a minor under 14 years
of age as to a change in his or her name, and the court shall consider the
minor's wishes.
(6) If the petitioner is married, the court, in its order
changing the name of the petitioner, may include the name of the spouse, if
the spouse consents, and may include the names of minor children of the
petitioner of whom the petitioner has legal custody. The written consent to
the change of name of a child 14 years of age or older, signed by the child
in the presence of the court, shall be filed with the court before the court
includes that child in its order. Except as provided in subsection (7), the
name of a minor under 14 years of age may not be changed unless he or she is
the natural or adopted child of the petitioner and unless consent is
obtained from the mother and father jointly, from the surviving parent if 1
is deceased, or from 1 of the minor's parents if there is only 1legal parent
available to give consent. If the court considers the child to be of
sufficient age to express a preference, the court shall consult a minor
under 14 years of age as to a change in his or her name, and the court shall
consider the minor's wishes.
(7) The name of a minor may be changed pursuant to
subsection (5) or (6) with the consent or signature of the custodial parent
upon notice to the non custodial parent pursuant to supreme court rule and
after a hearing in either of the following circumstances: (a) If both of the
following occur: (i) The other parent, having the ability to support or
assist in supporting the child, has failed or neglected to provide regular
and substantial support for the child or, if a support order has been
entered, has failed to substantially comply with the order, for 2 years or
more before the filing of the petition. (ii) The other parent, having the
ability to visit, contact, or communicate with the child, has regularly and
substantially failed or neglected to do so for 2 years or more before the
filing of the petition. (b) The other parent has been convicted of a
violation of section 136b, 520b, 520c, 520d, 520e, or 520g of the Michigan
penal code, Act No. 328 of the Public Acts of 1931, being sections 750.136b,
750.520b to 750.520e, and 750.520g of the Michigan Compiled Laws, and the
child or a sibling of the child is a victim of the crime.
(8) A false statement that is intentionally included
within a petition for a name change constitutes perjury under section422 of
the Michigan penal code, Act No. 328 of the Public Acts of 1931, being
section 750.422 of the Michigan Compiled Laws .Amended by P.A. 1996, No.
106, § 1, Eff. March 31, 1997;P.A. 1996, No. 409, § 1, Eff. Jan. 1, 1998;
P.A. 1996, No.495, § 1, Eff. March 31, 1997.
|