Keep your maiden name? Yes.
When an application asks for a previous legal name you can provide your maiden name. Individuals who have changed their names for business purposes should also list their former name in this circumstance. The name that
You use your legal name. If you changed your name legally after you divorced then you use that name. If you did not then your legal name is your old married name.
Of course it is not legal. It is fraudulent and subject to criminal penalties. The executor should have the utilities put into the name of the estate or have them stopped.
Yes
Your name is in all caps on legal documents for clarity and consistency. This practice helps to distinguish your name from other text and ensures that it is easily recognizable and stands out for legal purposes.
Even married the mother can choose the last name of the child. Ex-girlfriend means nothing in a legal sense, she can choose what last name to give her child.
A hyphenated married name where the wife wants to keep her own surname her surname comes first and then her husbands. Example: Jane Doe-Smith. Many professionals that have made a name for themselves before they get married prefer to keep their name for notoriety reasons and some young women just want to keep their family surname. It actually makes better sense when a woman combines her maiden name with that of her partners for genealogy purposes. Once a woman is married it is often hard to trace whom she married. If a man chooses to use a hypnenated name, his surname comes first: John Smith-Doe. Done this way, the names remain searchable in a genealogy database if properly entered.
Yes, you can file a legal name change for any reason, as long as it isn't to take the legal name of someone famous. You can change your name to his last name without being married. It is just cheaper court costs if you were married.
Windsor her name is Catherine Elizabeth Windsor
The woman who married Denny Crane on Boston Legal was Beverly Bridge, played by Joanna Cassidy.
no way
She must use her legal name; if this happens to be her maiden name (i.e. she did not change her name at the marriage) then she may do so. However, if she did change her name, she must use this on all legal documents which require it.