제목   제목   제목   제목   제목
내용









New life and New beginning
DIVORCE










 WRITER : 관리자   |   DATE : 24-05-16
When a child is born, the biological mother’s name is listed on the child’s birth certificate. In most situations if the mother is married, her spouse will be listed as the child’s father. However, that is clearly not necessarily always the case. And sometimes, for a variety of reasons, a child’s birth certificate needs to be corrected.

Today, a large percentage of children born today are not born to married parents. In fact, according to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention – National Center for Health Statistics, the percentage of all births to unmarried women in 2015 was 40.3%.

There are certainly a wide of array of instances where a child’s parent may be left off of or incorrectly listed on the child’s birth certificate. By way of example, the mother may not know the identity of the child’s father at the time of the child’s birth. Or, the mother may be married, but her spouse is not the biological father of the child. There are also the issues of surrogacy, adoption, and sperm or egg donation, which can be complex and are issues for other blog posts. This blog post will specifically focus on the issue of correcting a child’s birth certificate when the child’s father is either incorrect or missing. For the sake of clarity, this post will refer to the child’s “father,” though the Illinois Parentage Act makes it clear that “insofar as practicable, the provisions of this Act applicable to parent-child relationships shall apply equally to men and women as parents.”

In a situation where the father listed on a child’s birth certificate needs to be changed – whether that be to add the missing parent’s name, which was previously missing, or correct the father’s name, there are specific procedures that need to be undertaken.

To begin, a parent-child relationship (“parentage”) must be established between the parent and the child. This can be done through a variety of different means. The law provides different presumptions of parentage, as follows. First, if the father and the mother were married, in a civil union, or in a substantially legal relationship when the child was born. Second, the father and the mother were married, in a civil union, or in a substantially legal relationship, and the child was born within 300 days after the relationship has ended, due to death, divorce, legal separation, declaration of invalidity, except as provided in the Gestational Surrogacy Act or other law. Third, if before the child was born, the father and the mother entered into a marriage, civil union, or substantially similar legal relationship, even if the relationship could be declared legally invalid, and the child is born during the relationship or within 300 days of its termination (due to one of the reasons listed above). Fourth, if after the child is born, the father and the mother enter into a marriage, civil union, or substantially legal relationship, even if the relationship could be declared legally invalid, and the person has consented in writing to being named as the child’s parent on the child’s birth certificate. The law provides that if two or more of these presumptions conflict, then the presumption “which on the facts is founded on the weightier considerations of policy and logic, especially the policy of promoting the child’s best interests, controls.”

Parentage is then established by completing a Voluntary Acknowledgement of Paternity form or by a court’s adjudication (ruling) as to a man’s parentage of a child. To begin that process, the mother or the parent seeking to be found as a parent must file a petition with the court. From there, if the matter is contested, DNA testing may be ordered by a court. If the court finds that an individual is a child’s parent, then a judge will sign a court order establishing paternity of the child.

Similarly, a court can rule on parentage through a legal adoption. A court order establishing parentage also creates a set of obligations on a parent to provide support, as well as rights to parenting time and parental responsibilities for the child. Lastly, parentage can be established through a valid and legal gestational surrogacy arrangement.

So, now that you have parentage established – but the child’s birth certificate is incorrect. What do you do next? According to the Illinois Department of Public Health Division of Vital Records, if you want to correct a birth certificate, you must complete the following affidavit. This affidavit must be properly completed and sent to the Illinois Department of Public Health Division of Vital Records office, along with the court document that establishes parentage. In completing the affidavit, several important personal details must be provided, regarding the child, the parent who is to be listed, and the parent that was incorrectly listed (if any).

If you would like legal assistance in the areas of establishing parentage, adoption, or correcting a child’s birth certificate, please contact us for a free consultation.

Divorce Lawyer's
이혼전문변호사 무료법률상담
어렵게 이혼을 결정하였는데, 배우자와 협의이혼이 안되었다면 주변지인들의 조언을 얻기보다는 이혼을 전문적으로 다루는 이혼전문변호사와 상담을 통하여 조언을 얻는 것이 가장 좋은 방법입니다. 조정이혼을 거쳐 소송이혼까지 가게 된다면 당신은 배우자의 또다른 모습에 크게 실망할지도 모릅니다. 그만큼 이혼재판은 재산분할 / 양육권 / 양육비 / 위자료 등등 금전적 문제가 관여되어 있어 치열하기도 합니다. 이러한 소송에서 이기기 위해서는 여러분들이 현재 상황에 대한 정확한 진단과 조언이 필요합니다. 이혼전문변호사와 상담은 모두 무료로 이루어지고 있으니, 부담없이 문의를 주시면 친절히 답변해 드리도록 하겠습니다.
Lawyer Counseling