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I was wondering what do people consider common law marriage to be?
I think I have a clue as to what it is but im not sure
just curious

2007-03-12 10:57:03 · 17 answers · asked by lady_luv 2 in Family & Relationships Marriage & Divorce

17 answers

Most states do not even recognize common law marriage anymore and it is impossible to make a case for it. But in the states that do recognize it (see this link)
http://www.unmarried.org/common.html
there are very specific requirements in being able to prove it, and contrary to popular belief it has NOTHING to do with the amount of time you lived together.
I know where I live you have to be capable of getting married, lived together, assumed marital responsibilities and held out to the general public that you were married. And you have to be able to prove all of these things.

2007-03-12 11:08:38 · answer #1 · answered by coffee_inthe_evening 2 · 1 0

Common Law Marriage is when a couple has been together and have lived together for a certain amount of time. It is then recognized in the state as a "marriage" so if someone passes you can recieves the benefits and what not.

Now each state is different. So you'll have to look that up.

I know my state actually got rid of the law.

2007-03-12 11:05:32 · answer #2 · answered by colie 3 · 0 1

Common law marriage is where two people are together over an extended amount of time (usually 10+ yrs). After they are together for that long, under the law they are considered married.

2007-03-12 11:01:12 · answer #3 · answered by Ruthie 2 · 0 1

Texas: calls it an "casual marriage," rather than a basic-regulation marriage. under § 2.401 of the Texas kinfolk Code, an casual marriage may be commonplace the two by making use of assertion (registering on the county courthouse while not having a ceremony), or by making use of assembly a three-prong attempt exhibiting evidence of (a million) an settlement to be married; (2) cohabitation in Texas; and (3) illustration to others that the events are married. A 1995 replace provides an evidentiary presumption that there grew to become into no marriage if no fit for evidence of marriage is filed interior 2 years of the date the events separated and ceased residing mutually. i might touch an legal professional in Texas to easily be sure you do no longer might desire to document for divorce, regardless of the undeniable fact that it appears that evidently such as you're interior the sparkling.

2016-10-18 05:26:13 · answer #4 · answered by dudik 4 · 0 0

common law marriage don't take place in all states. But my uncle was with this woman for 5 years and was considered common law marriage and when the split they actually had to get a divorce...

2007-03-12 11:02:28 · answer #5 · answered by furby_lost 5 · 0 1

Common law is not recognized in very many states anymore but basically what it is is when a man and a woman live together for a length of time (usually 7 years) they are considered married.

2007-03-12 11:00:32 · answer #6 · answered by hummingbird 3 · 1 1

Many states say that after so many years of cohabitation that if you split-up you would divide personal belongs the same as a married couple. But in a common law marriage you still do not get the tax advantages or health benefits through employers of a married couple.

2007-03-12 11:06:02 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Here it is just a matter of a male and female living in the same house for a month, then it's considered common law marriage

2007-03-12 11:00:31 · answer #8 · answered by Monica T 2 · 0 2

In some states after you have lived with a person for a certain amount of time then by "common law" you are married. Sharing the same living space for certain amount of time.. And yes they are entitled to 1/2...

2007-03-12 11:01:27 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

depending on which sate you live in, a common-law marriage is between a man and woman who have been monogamus for at least 7 yrs. basically, you live like you're married, you just don't have the wedding. you have assets together like a house or car, you may have children. common-law marriage isn't valid in all states, like mine.

2007-03-12 12:04:55 · answer #10 · answered by sweetness10301978 2 · 0 0

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