In the case of a married couple who divorce the children will normally
have the family surname. They will have lived together in a family unit
- perhaps for many years. Under such circumstances if husband and wife
divorce the children will normally retain the family surname. If mother
subsequently remarries and takes a new surname the father of the children
can legitimately object if the mother seeks to change the surname of
the children to that of her new husband.
Of course, the children's father may not object but most fathers do
object under these circumstances. The courts will not normally allow
a change of name here. This is because of the period of time that the
children are likely to have had their surname and because of the link
it establishes about their parentage.
In the case of an unmarried couple it is slightly different. As we
have already seen, children cannot be registered with the surname of
their father if the parties are unmarried unless the father consents.
But in fact the issue here is not really with what surname the child
or children have been registered. It is really how long mother and father
lived together and how long their life as a family lasted.
In the case of an unmarried couple who have lived together with the
children for many years and where the children were registered with
the surname of their father the courts would regard the matter in much
the same light as with a couple who were married and probably refuse
to agree to a change of surname. The living together as a family unit
and the sense of identity with their father would be important.
However, the courts are in general more likely to agree to a change
of surname for children in the case of unmarried parents. In one case
which has been before the House of Lords - Dawson v Wearmouth - the
mother had been married to Mr Wearmouth and had two children by him.
When she and the child's father divorced the mother and the children
retained the surname of Wearmouth.
Mother subsequently met Mr Dawson, she and the children lived with
him and she had a third child by him. When the third child was about
one month old mother and Mr Dawson separated. Mother registered the
third child with the surname of Wearmouth which she and the two other
children had maintained. She knew that Mr Dawson would not like this
and in fact Mr Dawson applied to the court in order that the third child
could be known by his surname.
The House of Lords refused. The question, as always, was what was in
the child's best interests. In this case mother, Mr Dawson and the child
had not really lived together as a family unit for any length of time.
Mother not unnaturally argued that she and the two other children had
one surname and it would do more for the unity of the family if all
the children had the same surname. The court agreed with her.
It will be appreciated that an unmarried father who has never lived
with the mother and who has not agreed to let the child be registered
with his surname is in a very weak position indeed.
There are other, exceptional, cases where the decision is relatively
easy. For example, father and mother may have been married and divorced
but the father may have been sent to prison for a crime which has attracted
some publicity. In one such case where the child had exactly the same
name as his father the court readily agreed to the change of surname
that was wanted by the mother. As always, it is what is in the best
interests of the child that matters.
These are probably the most common situations and they arise all the
time in family law. A separate, but related, question is the change
of surname by a wife following divorce or, indeed, the question of changing
names generally. To learn more about that please continue.