OPINION OF THE COURT
Petitioner seeks leave pursuant to article 6 of the Civil Rights Law to change her surname to that of her same-sex life partner.
Under the common law, a person can simply assume any name, absent fraud or an interference with the rights of others (Matter of Anonymous,
The statute requires that the court be assured that the desired name change is not intended to defraud or misrepresent, nor interfere with the rights of others (Matter of J.O.T.,
The petition before this court does not involve children. Rather, it concerns an adult who wishes to change her surname to that of her life partner, and that individual has consented. The court need not, therefore, concern itself with factors other than those of fraud, intentional misrepresentation or interference with the rights of others.
In New Jersey, the courts recently addressed a case very similar to that before this court. There, a woman petitioned to change her last name to include the surname of her same-sex life partner. The lower court denied her application on the ground that allowing the change of name would give the appearance of approving of same-sex marriage, something not allowed under New Jersey state law. On appeal, the intermediate appellate court reversed the lower court’s ruling in a lengthy opinion, finding that because there was no intent to defraud and no criminal purposes, the trial court had no discretion to decide what New Jersey public policy was or should be (In re Application of Bacharach, 344 NJ Super 126, 129,
In New York, as in our sister state across the Hudson River, New Jersey, public policy is squarely on the side of outlawing discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation (Executive Law § 291 [1]; §§ 296, 296-a). Thus, assuming that public policy is an appropriate consideration in this application, the granting of it would be consistent with the public policy of the State of New York. However, as noted in the Bacharach decision, an application to change a name is not to be decided based on public policy grounds, but on a much narrower basis.
This point was eloquently underscored by another judge of this court in a recent decision concerning a name change involving a different context — an individual of transgendered experience. (Matter of Guido,
Here, as in Guido, the court finds that its scope of review of the petition is narrow. Finding no intent to defraud or misrepresent, and no interference with the rights of others, this court grants the petitioner’s application to change her name, and as set forth in its order of November 25, 2003, the petitioner shall be known, upon publication and proof of compliance, as Gena Michele Zaks.
Notes
. Professor Arthur S. Leonard, Transgender Woman Gets Name Change, Gay City News, Nov. 6-12, 2003, at 9 (Guido decision adopts “pragmatic” approach that met “the immediate needs” of the petitioner but refused to recognize an actual change of sex; one of the “most sharply argued questions” facing the courts as well as society as a whole is whether a change of sex can be legally recognized in the absence of gender-reassignment surgery, based solely on body changes induced by hormone treatments).
