Marriage license required, waiting period
In Missouri, two people must get a marriage license before getting married. They apply at the recorder of deeds office, and the license expires after 30 days. The marriage also has to be performed by someone legally allowed to do so. If one person is in jail or on active military duty out of state, that person can sign special paperwork instead of showing up in person. Common-law marriages (where two people live together but never got a license or ceremony) are not valid in Missouri. Breaking this law is a misdemeanor.
451.040. Marriage required, waiting period — presence not required, when — , contents — license when — of marriages void — lack of to perform marriage, effect — online applications, procedure. — 1. Previous to any marriage in this state, a license for that purpose shall be obtained from the officer to the same, and no marriage shall be as valid unless the license has been previously obtained, and unless the marriage is by a person authorized by law to marriages.
2. Before s for a marriage license shall receive a license, and before the shall be authorized to issue a license, the parties to the marriage shall present an application for the license, duly and ed in the presence of the recorder of deeds or their or electronically through an online . If an applicant is unable to sign the application in the presence of the recorder of deeds as a result of the applicant's incarceration or because the applicant has been called or ordered to active military duty out of the state or country, the recorder of deeds may issue a license if:
(1) An or is submitted by the incarcerated or military applicant on a form furnished by the recorder of deeds which includes the necessary for the recorder of deeds to issue a marriage license under this section. The form shall include, but not be limited to, the following:
(a) The names of both applicants for the marriage license;
(b) The date of birth of the incarcerated or military applicant;
(c) An by the incarcerated or military applicant that both applicants are not related;
(d) The date the marriage ended if the incarcerated or military applicant was previously married;
(e) An attestation signed by the incarcerated or military applicant stating in substantial part that the applicant is unable to appear in the presence of the recorder of deeds as a result of the applicant's incarceration or because the applicant has been called or ordered to active military duty out of the state or country, which will be by the professional or official who directs the operation of the jail or prison or the military applicant's military officer, or such professional's or official's , and by a commissioned by the state of Missouri at the time of . However, in the case of an applicant who is called or ordered to active military duty outside Missouri, may be obtained by a notary public who is duly commissioned by a state other than Missouri or by notarial services of a military officer in accordance with the Code of Military Justice at the time of verification;
(2) The completed marriage license application of the incarcerated or military applicant is submitted which includes the applicant's Social number; except that, in the event the applicant does not have a Social Security number, a sworn statement by the applicant to that effect; and
(3) A copy of a government-issued identification for the incarcerated or military applicant which contains the applicant's photograph. However, in such case the incarcerated applicant does not have such an identification because the jail or prison to which he or she is confined does not issue an identification with a photo his or her application shall satisfy this requirement.
3. Each application for a license shall contain the Social Security number of the applicant, provided that the applicant in fact has a Social Security number, or the applicant shall sign a statement provided by the that the applicant does not have a Social Security number. The Social Security number contained in an application for a marriage license shall be from examination and copying section 610.024. After the receipt of the application the recorder of deeds shall issue the license, unless one of the parties withdraws the application. The license shall be void after thirty days from the date of .
4. Any person violating the of this section shall be guilty of a .
5. Common-law marriages shall be .
6. Provided, however, that no marriage shall be deemed or , nor shall the be in any way affected for in any person so the marriage pursuant to section 451.100, if with the full belief on the part of the persons, so married, or either of them, that they were lawfully in marriage.
7. In the event a recorder of deeds utilizes an online process to accept applications for a marriage license or to issue a marriage license and the applicants' identity has not been verified in person, the recorder of deeds shall have a two-step identity verification process or a process that independently verifies the identity of such applicants. Such process shall be adopted as part of any electronic system for marriage licenses if the applicants do not present themselves to the recorder of deeds or his or her designee in person. It shall be the responsibility of the recorder of deeds to ensure any process adopted to allow electronic application or issuance of a marriage license verifies the identities of both applicants. The recorder of deeds shall not accept applications for or issue marriage licenses through the process provided in this unless at least one of the applicants is a resident of the county or in which the application was submitted.
(RSMo 1939 § 3364, A.L. 1943 p. 639, A.L. 1974 H.B. 981, A.L. 1978 H.B. 1634, A.L. 1981 S.B. 21 & 113, A.L. 1986 H.B. 931, A.L. 1997 S.B. 361, A.L. 1998 H.B. 987, A.L. 2001 H.B. 157, A.L. 2007 S.B. 22, A.L. 2014 S.B. 796, A.L. 2021 H.B. 271, A.L. 2025 H.B. 737 & 486 merged with S.B. 43)
Prior revisions: 1929 § 2977; 1919 § 7302; 1909 § 8283
(2014) Requirement that marriage license be signed in the presence of the recorder of deeds or deputy is as applied to incarcerated applicant. Amos v. Higgins, 996 F.Supp.2d 810 (W.D. Mo.).
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Legal information, not legal advice. Always confirm with the official source at revisor.mo.gov.