|
Common-Law
Marriage
(Maybe You Did Without Having Said
I Do)
By Martin
Hoffman, JD
Marriage is
traditionally considered to be a civil contract between a man
and a woman to be husband and wife. The validity of a marriage
is determined under the laws of the state where the marriage is
entered into- if the marriage is valid where the ceremony took
place, it will be held valid throughout the United States. Generally,
in order to enter into a valid marriage, the parties must have
the same mental capacity as is necessary to enter into a civil
contract.
Marriage ceremonies
may be religious or civil. The person who performs the ceremony
must be authorized by law to do so. Generally, ministers, priests,
rabbis, judges, a justice of the peace and in some states, notaries
public, are authorized to perform wedding ceremonies. Other than
requiring an indication of willingness to enter into the marriage,
no special language or format is required for the marriage ceremony.
Most states require witnesses to the marriage ceremony.
During the
time that this country still had an expanding frontier, most states
considered a man and woman to be married if they lived together
for a certain length of time, had sexual intercourse and represented
to the community at large that they were married, even if they
never went through a formal civil or religious marriage ceremony.
These unions were called common-law marriages. By
1950, most states had abolished common-law marriage by statute,
as they were seen as encouraging fraud and condoning vice, debasing
conventional marriage, and as no longer necessary with increased
access to clergy and justices of the peace. Nevertheless, while
the institution of common-law or informal marriage has been steadily
declining across the United States in recent years, common-law
marriages can be entered into in eleven states and the District
of Columbia.
A common-law
marriage comes into existence when a man and women live together,
act as if, and represent to the world at-large that they are husband
and wife. At a minimum, the couple must overtly express or manifest
an intention to be married and have a reputation of being married.
There is no particular length of time that a couple must live
together to have a valid common-law marriage, but the longer they
live together, the more likely it is that the intent to marry
will be established. Most of the states that currently recognize
common-law require that cohabitation (sexual intercourse) have
taken place.
If a common-law
marriage was entered into at a time that such marriages were recognized
by the state, the marriage is valid even if such marriages have
subsequently been abolished by the state legislature. In order
to terminate such a marriage, a divorce is necessary. Common-law
marriages create the same rights, duties and obligations as exist
for couples married in a civil or religious ceremony.
The rights
of a surviving spouse, including a common-law spouse, extend to
burial decisions. Unless the deceased has previously indicated
his/her burial/funeral choices by will or power of attorney, in
most states, the surviving spouse is the one who will make funeral/burial
decisions. If the validity of a common-law marriage is disputed,
there may be a delay of several months before the court decides
the issue. Usually, by statute, decision-making authority is given
to (in order of priority): a spouse, children, parents, brothers
and sisters, and other surviving kin.
Common-law
marriages are currently recognized in
Alabama
Colorado
The District of Columbia
Iowa
Kansas
Montana
Oklahoma
Pennsylvania
Rhode Island
South Carolina
Texas
Utah
If a common-law
marriage has come into existence within the borders of a state
that recognizes it, and the couple moves to a state where such
marriages cannot be contracted and may be contrary to public policy,
the new state will nevertheless generally recognize the marriage
as legal and valid.
Common-law
marriages are not formally recorded in the public records of the
state. Often, the question of whether a valid common-law marriage
is valid arises in the context of a will contest, where an alleged
common-law spouse is claiming a share of the estate, a divorce
proceeding, where alimony is requested, or a wrongful death action,
where a survivor requests money damages for the loss of a spouse.
Where the marriage is in dispute, the court will conduct an evidentiary
hearing to determine whether a valid common-law marriage exists.
Courts are somewhat reluctant to determine that one intended to
be married and didn't get married in the traditional sense. The
judge will require proof of intent and reputation- the proof may
include tax returns, loan applications, title documents such as
deeds, drivers licenses, bank accounts and witness statements
as to how the parties introduced each other. Once the marriage
is established, each party will have all the rights that are available
to a spouse or widow under state law.
Caution:
Conceivably, an unmarried couple that checks into a hotel room
in a common-law marriage state as a married couple, may be determined
to be married if they may have satisfied the evidentiary requirements
for a common-law marriage in that state.
Martin
Hoffman is an attorney, legal columnist and author with more
than 25 years of experience in the area of family law. He
is also the president of thelawyerpages.com (does not seem
to be operational at this time), an Internet legal portal
that provides consumers with information about the law and
lawyers, provides free legal advice and publishes a national
directory of attorneys searchable by specialty and geography.
Please
check back for common law inquiries in Canada |
|