Opinion
Jаnice Christensen Banks appeals from a judgment of marital dissolution insofar as her request for restoration of maiden name was denied.
The cause was tried very briefly as an uncontested matter. Pertinent to this appeal is the following colloquy, which occurred just before the taking of testimony, between the court and counsel for the wife:
“Mr. Crenna: . . . The Court shall also order that petitioner shall be restored to her maiden name, Janice Christensen, effective by entry of final judgment of this —
“The Court: I don’t know whether I will or not. She’s got three children. All I do is create conflict. The children’s name is Banks, right?
“Mr. Crenna: That is correct, Your Honor, but as I understand it, she has a statutory right —
“The Court: No, she doesn’t have a statutory right.
“Mr. Crenna: She has a—I would propose that she has a constitutional right to change her name.
“The Court: She may use any name she wants to, but you are asking the Court now to order her to resume the use of her maiden name, which I am not going to do so long as there are minor children. I mean, I don’t care what name she uses. It doesn’t make any difference to me.
“Mr. Crenna: I don’t quite undеrstand, your Honor, if she is free to use any name, how that would lessen the effect on the children if she is only denied the legal right —
“The Court: I am just not going to order that she be allowed to resume her maiden name, and I don’t think she has a constitutional right to insist that I do that.
*634 “Now, she mаy have, as you point out, a constitutional right to assume any name which she wants to assume. With that I am not quarreling. That’s a totally different proposition. But I consider that the sanity of the children and a lack of frustration over a different name is of considerably grеater importance at this point than a resumption of her maiden name. I don’t see what is to be gained by resuming her maiden name.
“Mr. Crenna: I think that the gain is that it makes her a whole person again in the sense that she now —
“The Court: Isn’t she a whole person now?
“Mr. Crenna: She now can become the individuаl she was prior to her marriage to Mr. Banks, and it’s a very important issue to Mrs. Banks.
“The Court: It might very well be, but it’s a very important issue also to the Court, and I would advise Mrs. Banks that a rose by any other name is a rose just the same. It doesn’t make any difference what your name is. And my сoncern at this stage of the game is with these children. That’s my major concern. Whether or not Mr. and Mrs. Banks were able to make it insofar as their own marriage is concerned is their own business. They got married. They were adults. But they have three small children now who ought not now be frustrated by this effort. The answer to your point in inquiry is no.”
Neither the reporter’s transcript nor the report of the domestic relations investigator contains any evidence relating to the request for restoration of maiden name. Appellant contends that the court should nevertheless have granted her request. California legislation has long provided for restoration of the wife’s maiden name upon the dissolution of a marriage. The presently effective statute is Civil Code section 4362, which provides: “In аny proceeding under this part, except an action for legal separation, the court may restore the maiden or former name of the wife regardless of whether or not a request therefor was included in the petition.” (Stats. 1970, ch. 311, § 1, pp. 703, 705.) Appеllant contends that the court was under a mandatory duty to restore her maiden name even though the statute says that the court “may restore the maiden name or former name of the wife. . . .” (Italics added.)
As ordinarily used in a statute, the word “may” is merely permissive and discretionary; “may” is not to be interpreted or understood as mandatory unless the context or any other indication of legislative intention plainly compels an unusual interpretation.
(Ostrander
v.
City of Richmond
(1909)
The first California statute permitting restoration of a maiden name in divorce proceedings appeared in 1945. Civil Code section 131 was amended to read as follows: “[I]f there is no living issue of such marriage, the court may, in its discretion, if requested, restore to the wife her maiden name or the name under which she was married. . . .” (Stats. 1945, ch. 175, pp. 655-656; italics added.) It plainly appears from this language that the trial court was called upon to exercise discretion in deсiding whether to restore the maiden name—but only when there were no living children of the marriage. Later in 1945, a further amendment deleted the reference to “living issue,” leaving in effect the following: “[T]he court may, in its discretion, if requested, restore to the wife, her maiden name or the name under which she was married. . . .” (Stats. 1945, ch. 721, § 1, p. 1404; italics added.) Hence, by the end of 1945, the trial judge was authorized to exercise discretion in restoring a wife’s maiden name, notwithstanding the existence of any children.
In 1947, Civil Code section 131 was again amended—this time to give thе trial judge discretion in restoring a maiden name even when a request therefor was not included in the prayer of the complaint. Section 131 thereafter read: “. . . and the court may, in its discretion and regardless of whether or not a request therefor was included in the prayer of the complaint, restore the maiden name of the wife or the name under which she was married. . . .” (Stats. 1947, ch. 1029, § 1, pp. 2301, 2302; italics added.)
In 1969, a comprehensive revision of the California marital laws was effectuated with the passage of the Family Law Act. 1 The enactment repealed section 131 and the provision for restoration of maiden name was placed in Civil Code section 4521. That section was identical to the present section 4362 in providing: “In any proceeding under this part, except an aсtion for legal separation, the court may restore the maiden name or former name of the wife regardless of whether or not a request therefor was in- *636 eluded in the petition.” (Stats. 1969, ch. 1608, § 8, pp. 3314, 3328; italics added.)
The words “in its discretion” which were included in former sеction 131 do not appear in section 4362; it is claimed that the language in question was “carefully excised” for the new section. Deletion of a statutory provision by legislation does suggest that a change was intended.
(Clements
v.
T. R. Bechtel Co.
(1954)
The legislative history of Civil Code section 4362 yields somewhat inconclusive results. The Family Law Act was an outgrowth of legislation proрosed in the Report of the Governor’s (former Gov. Edmund G. Brown) Commission on the Family (1966) (hereinafter “Governor’s Commission”). (Report of 1969 Divorce Reform Legislation of the Assembly Commission on the Judiciary (4 Assem.J. (1969) 8053, 8054); Family Law Act Practice (Cont.Ed.Bar 1970) §§ 1.1-1.3, pp. 113-115.)
The Governor’s Commission recommended the repeal of former Civil Code section 131 and its replacement by the following provision: “At the time of its order declaring the marriage dissolved or void, the court may, in its discretion and regardless of whether or not a request therefor was made to the cоurt, restore the maiden name of the wife or the name under which she was married.” (Governor’s Commission, supra, pp. 78, 98; italics added.) To give effect to the Report of the Governor’s Commission, Assembly Bill 1420 (Shoemaker) and Senate Bill 826 (Grunsky) were introduced in the Legislature. Neither bill was enacted; the commission’s proposals were presented again to the 1968 session (Assem. Bill 230 and Sen. Bill 88). Again, neither bill moved; Assembly Bill 487 (Hayes) was offered as an alternative but it, too, remained in committee. Each of these bills contained provisions on restоration of maiden name identical with that of the Governor’s Commission report. 2
In the 1969 Legislature, Senate Bill 252 (Grunsky) and Assembly Bill 530 (Hayes), dealing with reform of the divorce laws, were proposed in their respective houses. Senate Bill 252 was amended twice in the Senate before being passed; it was thereafter amended three times in the Assembly so as to conform with Assembly Bill 530. At no time during its lengthy progress through the Senate or Assembly did Senate Bill 252 contain any provision regarding restoration of maiden name. Not until *637 the Assembly amendments theretо were refused by the Senate and the bill went to conference was there any formulation of a provision regarding maiden name restoration. The report of the Committee on Conference, presented to both houses, contained Amendment 79, frоm which came Civil Code sections 4520 and 4521. This report, recommending passage of the Family Law Act and proposing amendments thereto, was adopted by both the Senate (3 Sen.J. (1969) 4737, 4747) and the Assembly (4 Assem.J. (1969) 6850, 6860).
Examination of the progress of the provision on restoratiоn of maiden name as it was first proposed by the Governor’s Commission in 1966 until it finally resurfaced in the conference report casts doubt on the claim that there was a “careful excision” of the words “in its discretion.” There is no discussion of the question in any of the committee reports. It would further seem that if the intent had been to end the judge’s discretionary power, Senate Bill 252 would have contained a clause on restoration of name in its originally proposed form or after it had been amended in one of thе houses.
The substantive changes in California family law resulting from the passage of the Family Law Act were the elimination of fault as grounds for granting or denying a divorce (and for refusing alimony) and the elimination of unequal divisions of community property.
(In re Marriage of McKim
(1972)
What is the scope of the trial judge’s discretion? Any person may change his name at any time without initiating legal proceedings.
(Emery
v.
Kipp
(1908)
However, it has been held that a change of name under the Code of Civil Procedure may be denied
only
when there is a showing of “substantial reason”
(In re Ross, supra,
It appears to us that the scope of discretion in the general name-change proceeding may appropriately be applied to the restoration of maiden name in dissolution proceedings. Just as public policy favors judicial granting of a name change for correcting the public record, it should also favor the restoration of maiden name in dissolution proceedings. Application of a stricter standard in marital cases could result in the useless practice of a female’s waiting until the dissolution proceedings are over, only to petition for a name change under the hypothetically morе liberal provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure. That cannot be what the Legislature intended in its adoption of Civil Code section 4362.
Accordingly, the trial judge should grant restoration óf the wife’s maiden name in the absence of “substantial reason” or “peculiаr circumstances” which would support a denial thereof. (Cf.
In re Weingand, supra,
The judgment granting dissolution is modifiеd to restore appellant’s maiden name; as so modified the judgment is affirmed.
Rattigan, Acting P. J., and Emerson, J., * concurred.
Notes
Codified in Civil Code section 4000 et seq.
Each bill, except Assembly Bill 487, provided for a new Civil Code section 4727 which contained language identical with that in the Governor’s Commission report. Assembly Bill 487 provided for new Civil Code section 95 which contained this language.
Retired judge of the superior court sitting under assignment by the Chairman of the Judicial Council.
