Jethro Bodine
Member
I'm not sure you're understanding my POV about all this. But that could be my fault because I will confess I understood common law marriage as two people living together with no thought of marriage whatsoever and the state deciding for them they will now be legally recognized as being married after a certain period of time whether they want to be or not.No you mis-understand the law. Nine states still have legal Common Law marriage, seven others made laws that take in special consideration for religious groups such as the Quakers in PA, because they did that all people can legally also choose that option.
ALL states recognize any legal marriage from another state.
If your friend and your brother were married in a state where Common Law is legal then every other state recognizes those marriages as being legal. They don't have a choice. Per the Supreme Court ruling.
That is why the Supreme Court was being pushed to make a ruling defining marriage as being between a man and a woman. They refused to do it. If they had,, we wouldn't be in this mess with same-sex marriage.
My state tried to get that definition written into our state constitution several yrs. ago but the voters said no.
I thought that was going to happen to my son and my brother in their respective relationships in their states. I see that is NOT going to happen. They will remain legally unmarried until they purposely get married. Common law marriage according to that definition is NOT recognized in their states. And that is the common law 'marriage license-less' marriage I resist in the church. If I was a pastor I'd turn you right around at the door and say come back when you're really married.