Tangible
interest
Section
144.225, subdivision 7
of the Minnesota Statutes limits
who can have a certified birth
or death certificate to a person
who has a tangible interest in
the requested certificate.
Tangible interest helps protect
people who are born in Minnesota
and the families of people who
die in Minnesota against fraud.
Tangible interest helps by
limiting who can have a
certificate that is used for a
legal purpose such as school
registration, applying for a
passport or for a social
security number, or for settling
an estate.
Tangible interest only applies
to certified birth and death
certificates. It does not change
the fact that most Minnesota
birth and death records are
available to the public. If a
record is not available to the
public you may be refused the
record, even if you have
tangible interest.
You
have tangible interest in a
certificate if you are:
-
the subject of the
certificate;
-
if
you are the child,
grandchild, spouse, parent,
grandparent, legal
custodian, conservator, or
guardian of the subject;
-
if
you are a personal
representative of the estate
of the subject;
-
if
you are a licensed attorney;
-
if
you are the person who filed
or a representative of the
organization that filed the
birth or death information
with the Minnesota
Department of Health (MDH)
or a local registrar;
-
a
successor of the subject;
-
a
sibling of the subject if
the requested record is a
death record;
-
a
trustee of a trust and the
requested record is a death
record; or
-
the representative of an
adoption agency.
You may
also be issued a certificate if
a person who has tangible
interest authorized you to
receive the certificate or if
you can demonstrate to the state
registrar that the certificate
is necessary for the
determination or protection of a
personal or property right.
A
local, state, or federal
governmental agency may be
issued a certificate if it is
necessary for the governmental
agency to perform its authorized
duties.
A
certificate will be issued
pursuant to a court order.