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Common Law
Marriage
Many Americans believe that if they are together for a specific
length of time, like seven years, that they are engaged in a
common law marriage. That is an old myth that is “busted.”
While some states do recognize common law marriage, they are
few and their restrictions are stringent.
Research has found that couples that practice common law
marriage are up to three times more likely to suffer a divorce
than traditional marriage types unless you have premarital
education and participate in common law marriage with the first
and only person you live with.
Because the laws of all states that recognize common law
marriage require death or formal divorce to dissolve a common
law marriage, you are not skirting your obligations or the
gravity of commitment by foregoing a formal wedding.
All states that provide for common law marriage require that
both parties be of majority age, 18 years old. Common law
marriage requirements are listed below for all states that
recognize such a union:
Alabama – mental
capacity to enter into agreement; agree to be married and
consummation of the relationship
Colorado – present yourself as married and cohabitate
Iowa – intend to be and stay married, continuous cohabitation
and public declaration of marriage
Kansas – mental capacity and legal ability to marry, agree to
marry and publicly represent that you are married
Montana – capacity to consent, agree to marry, cohabitate and
have a reputation of being married
Oklahoma – competency, agree to marry and cohabitate
Pennsylvania – verbal exchange of agreement to marry and a plan
to stay married
Rhode Island – serious intent to stay married and conduct of a
married couple
South Carolina – represent yourself as a married couple
Texas – signed form at their local county clerk’s office, agree
to marry, cohabitate and behave as husband and wife
Utah – capable of giving consent and a reputation of being
married
Washington, D.C. – cohabitate and express intent to be husband
and wife
There are a few ways you can represent yourself as a married
couple. The first is to tell the community you are married. The
second is to use the same last name. The third is to file joint
income tax returns and the fourth is to share in financial
obligations (mortgage, lease, car loan, utilities, etc.)
Georgia used to grant common law marital status but
discontinued this on January 1, 1997. If you met the state
requirements prior to that date and have been involved in the
same relationship continuously, your relationship is still
recognized as a common law marriage.
The same is true in Idaho, though they stopped the practice of
granting common law marital status on January 1, 1996. Ohio
also discontinued their common law marriage laws on October 10,
1991. Pennsylvania stopped granting common law marriage status
on January 1, 2005.
A common law marriage must be dissolved as any other marriage –
by divorce or death. There is no “common law divorce”; simply
leaving the relationship does not diminish your responsibility
to your common law husband or wife.
If you intend to live with someone as a married couple but do
not wish to enter into a common law marriage, you should each
sign an agreement stating that you are each free, independent
entities and do not wish to marry or become committed in the
eyes of the law.
The United States Constitution requires that all states
recognize marriages that are legal in another state. That means
that you are free to move to a “non-common law marriage state”
from a state which you have established this commitment. Please
note, however, that the rights of married couples do vary from
state to state.
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