After eight long years of being involved in courtroom fights, Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt have finally reached a point where their daughter Shiloh has had enough of the two of them, a new report claimed.

Shiloh has allegedly put her foot down against her actor father, who is sixty years old and pleaded with him to quit the unpleasant lawsuit that he is involved in with Angelina, who is forty-nine years old, about their French chateau, Chateau Miraval.

“Shiloh’s extremely unhappy that her dad won’t let up with his lawsuits. She’s had to bite her tongue for years now while adhering to mandated visits, but she’s been simmering away, waiting for the moment she can make her own feelings known,” an unnamed source told Woman’s Day Australia of Shiloh, who is repeating Angelina's recent exhortation to Brad to "put an end to the fighting" and assist the family in "healing" after the breakup of their marriage.

“Like her mum, Shiloh just wants these court cases to end for the sake of her and her siblings. She doesn’t understand why he can’t see how much it’s hurting her and why he just won’t let it go. And she’s willing to give Brad an ultimatum – drop the lawsuits or he’ll never see her again,” the anonymous insider told the entertainment news outlet.

The ultimatum that Shiloh has issued comes after she made a public announcement in the Los Angeles Times, in which she stated that she had made the choice to legally change her surname from Jolie-Pitt to Jolie—course of action is needed by the law in the state of California. Peter Levine, Shiloh's attorney, stated that she ultimately decided to alter her name "after experiencing a series of painful events."

In an advertisement that Shiloh published in the Los Angeles newspaper the previous week, the young woman, who is now 18 years old, said that she had submitted a petition to alter her name from Shiloh Nouvel Jolie-Pitt to Shiloh Nouvel Jolie. Despite the fact that this public statement generated some confusion, it is really a standard method that is utilized to speed up the process of a new name being approved.

The confirmation of Shiloh's petition in the Los Angeles Times "could not have been avoided," according to David Glass, an attorney based in California, who told PEOPLE Magazine that Shiloh "has to file a formal petition with the court to change her name."

In addition, David took note of the fact that Shiloh "is required to run an advertisement for a period of four consecutive weeks prior to the scheduled hearing, in addition to providing written notification to both of her parents."

After submitting the petition to change one's name, one is required to have an Order to Show Cause published in a newspaper for a period of at least four weeks, which necessitates the payment of a charge to the publication. After this procedure has been finished, it is anticipated that the approval of the new name will proceed without any problems.

“I’ve never seen a name approval opposed in court. Brad could come to court and say, for example, that Shiloh has been alienated against him by the mother. … But because she is no longer a minor, she can essentially call herself whatever she wants,” David stated.

Shiloh celebrated her 18th birthday on May 27 by submitting a petition to have her father's surname removed from her name. She is not the first member of the family who has expressed a desire to remove the "Pitt" word from her name.

Recently, her sister Vivienne, who is 16 years old, was given the name "Vivienne Jolie" on the Playbill for the play “The Outsiders,” for which she worked as a producer's assistant. In the meantime, Zahara, who was 19 years old at the time, referred to herself as Zahara Marley Jolie, omitting the word "Pitt," in a film that was released in 2023 by her sorority, Alpha Kappa Alpha.