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Take Your
Wife's Name? That'll Cost You --
so ACLU Steps in
Carla Hall
LA Times Staff Writer
December 15, 2006
Long before they got
engaged on a ridge in the Grand Tetons, they had talked about the
future and children and names -- specifically their own surnames.
She loved hers. He wanted to shed his.
Diana Bijon asked her
boyfriend if he would take her last name if they got married.
"I always hoped I would
meet a guy who would let my kids take my name. My name dies with me,
and my sister and I love my dad so much," said Bijon, 28, an ER
nurse at UCLA whose father is a French emigre.
Mike Buday, estranged from
his father, felt little attachment to his last name. He agreed to
change it.
"Diana's father, to a
certain extent, is a father figure to me, "he said.
A couple of years later,
when Buday, 29, proposed marriage while on a backpacking trip, Bijon
reminded him about their previous conversation.
"I said, 'Remember we
talked about names? Are you really going to take my last name?' "
Buday, unfazed, said yes.
"It was," he said, "not a
big deal."
Not until he actually tried
to take his fiancee's last name.
On the marriage license
application, which now costs $70 to filein L.A. County, Bijon could
simply fill in her last name or her soon-to-be husband's last name.
But if Buday wanted to
become a Bijon, he would have to get an order of the court to do so
-- and not before he had filed a petition, paid $320, advertised
public notice of his intention to change his name for four weeks in
a local newspaper and then appeared before a judge.
"It strikes both of us --
especially me -- that this is not one equal ground," said Buday, now
married to Bijon for more than a year but reduced to still using
his, well, maiden name. "This is about gender equality."
The American Civil
Liberties Union of Southern California agreed. Today the
organization plans to file suit against the state of California in
federal court, arguing that the difficulty a husband faces when
changing his name to his wife's violates the equal protection clause
provided by the 14th Amendment of the Constitution.
"This is important to the
couple and it's important symbolically, "said the local ACLU's legal
director, Mark Rosenbaum, who called the current license application
"the perfect marriage application for the17th century."
When the couple, who live
in Marina del Rey, sent an e-mail about their plight to the ACLU --
one of thousands of inquiries the group receives -- the organization
took on the case with gusto.
"Every step of that process
reflects a process of subordination oft he wife," Rosenbaum said.
"You have to get permission of the state to choose the name of the
wife, you have to pay for it ... you have to let the public know....
And finally you have to go to court to get approval.
"If you want to set up a
system to discourage couples from adopting the name of the wife,
this is it."
Only six states allow
either spouse to take the other's surname as a result of marriage.
It wasn't that long ago
that women had to battle to keep their last name after marriage.
"Until the 1970s, women had
to go to court to keep their maiden name or to change back to it
after divorce or widowhood," said Hannah Cannom, an associate of the
law firm of Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy who worked pro bono on
the ACLU filing.
Now, it's a simple option
in California for a woman to keep her name. But if the husband wants
to change his last name, or if the couple wants to hyphenate their
names or create a new one, they run into the same hurdles that the
wannabe Bijons faced.
Los Angeles Mayor Antonio
Villaraigosa, who famously combined his last name, Villar, with that
of his wife -- Raigosa -- when the couple married in 1987, also had
to go to court to change his name,t he mayor's office confirmed.
"Since he changed his name
as a person getting married, you would have thought someone else
would have seen this before and wanted to take it up as something to
change," said Christa Chan-Pak, another Milbank associate who worked
pro bono on the filing.
After Buday and Bijon found
out he couldn't automatically take her name, someone suggested that
he try the Department of Motor Vehiclest o get a name change. Buday
only succeeded in cracking up the clerk sat the Santa Monica DMV.
"They sort of scoffed at me
and laughed," said Buday, a senior technical manager at an
advertising firm. "The supervisor said, 'We don't do that. Men don't
change their last names.' The surprising thing is all four people I
interacted with were female."
Buday and Bijon decided to
contact the ACLU after they realized the process that the name
change would entail.
"We thought, 'Whoa, that's
insane for two people who were getting married and trying to share a
name," Bijon said.
Buday, who says he is not
particularly traditional, never considered the convention of a woman
changing her last name to be sacrosanct. And right after college,
when he ran a business, he used his middle name as his last name for
the venture.
"My primary value related
to names is you need to have no one to name," he said. "The
hyphenated name is a cop-out. A family, to be a family, should all
have the same name.
"So I guess there is a
traditional value in that. It's a little weird in my mind for the
husband and wife to have different last names."
The couple, who married in
August 2005, went to her parents first with their decision.
"When we asked my parents
what they thought about him taking my last name," Bijon said, "they
said, 'We'd be honored.' "
Buday's family was a little
less enthusiastic.
"My brother said something
like, 'That's weird.' "
Most of the couple's
friends and colleagues have been supportive about their quest.
"We already do, in general,
call ourselves Mr. and Mrs. Bijon. That's how our Christmas cards
went out," Buday said.
PHOTO: FAMILY NAME: Diana
Bijon and Mike Buday expected to be the Bijons after their marriage,
but the process got complicated. PHOTOGRAPHER: Richard Hartog Los
Angeles Times
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