A History of Matrimonial Institutions, Vol. 2 of 3 by George Elliott Howard

A History of Matrimonial Institutions, Vol. 2 of 3 by George Elliott Howard

Author:George Elliott Howard [Howard, George Elliott]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781534681385
Barnesnoble:
Publisher: CreateSpace Publishing
Published: 2016-06-14T00:00:00+00:00


Provision is everywhere made for a "return" or report by the persons or religious societies solemnizing marriages.[1204] In Connecticut, Vermont, and Rhode Island the return is made by indorsement upon the certificate, which is then sent to the clerk or registrar of the city or town whence it was issued or in which the celebration took place.[1205] By the Connecticut law of 1899 the return must be made before or during the first week of the month following the ceremony.[1206] In Maine and Massachusetts the societies or persons authorized to celebrate marriages are required to keep a record, and from it make periodical return to the clerk or registrar of the town in which the license was issued. By the Maine law the return must be made by the fifteenth day of each month, and a similar report sent to the clerk of the town where the intention was entered.[1207] The Massachusetts statute orders that between the first and tenth days of each month the certificate of each marriage celebrated shall be sent to the clerk or registrar of the city or town issuing the same, and if the marriage be solemnized in a city or town other than the place or places in which the persons reside, then a copy of the certificate, or of either certificate in case two were issued, must be returned to the proper officers of their respective places.[1208] The Massachusetts laws provide also that when marriages take place in another state between persons living in the commonwealth, such persons shall within seven days after their return file with the clerk or registrar of the town in which either lived at the time a certificate or declaration of the marriage, including the facts relating thereto required by law.[1209] A like return of marriages celebrated outside the state is prescribed in Maine[1210] and New Hampshire.[1211] In Vermont a "male resident" so married must within sixty days thereafter deposit with the clerk of the town where he resides a certificate embracing the statistics required by law.[1212] The statutes of Vermont also provide that the head of a family who moves into the state to become a permanent resident may cause a certificate of his marriage, including the same statistics, to be recorded in like manner.[1213]

In recent years most of the New England states have made wiser provision than in the earlier period for the collection and preservation of statistics relating to marriage. The town clerk or registrar is required to keep a more complete record. The statutes prescribe a large number of details which must be entered by him, sometimes even as a condition of granting the license. An illustration is afforded by the Massachusetts act of 1897. Clerks are commanded in each case to enter and report the date of the record; the date and place of the marriage; the name, residence, and official station of the person solemnizing; the name, place of birth, residence, age, and color of each of the parties; the number of



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