Foreign Marriage (Amendment) Act 1988

Type Public General Act
Publication 1988-11-02
State In force
Department Statute Law Database
Reform history JSON API

Persons whose marriages may be solemnised or registered under the 1892 Act

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Consent requirements for parties domiciled in Northern Ireland or Scotland varied or abolished according to the law of their domicile

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(4) (1) The same consent shall be required to the marriage under this Act of a party domiciled in England and Wales or in a country outside the United Kingdom as would be required in respect of that party to a marriage solemnised in England and Wales on the authority of a certificate issued by a superintendent registrar under Part III of the Marriage Act 1949. (2) The same consent shall be required to the marriage under this Act of a party domiciled in Northern Ireland as would be required in respect of that party to a marriage solemnised there. (3) No consent shall be required to a marriage under this Act in respect of a party domiciled in Scotland. (4) The Secretary of State or, in such cases as may be prescribed, the Registrar General for England and Wales may dispense with the necessity of obtaining any consent required by virtue of subsection (1) above if he is satisfied that it cannot be obtained because of the absence, inaccessibility or disability of the person whose consent is so required. (5) The necessity of obtaining any consent required by virtue of subsection (2) above may be dispensed with by an order under section 2 of the Marriages Act (Northern Ireland) 1954; and for the purposes of this subsection an application for such an order may be made to any county court in Northern Ireland. (6) Any person whose consent is required to a marriage under this Act may at any time before its solemnisation forbid it by— (a) writing the word “forbidden” against the entry of the intended marriage in the book of notices; and (b) adding after that word his name and address and a statement of the capacity by virtue of which his consent is required; and if a marriage is so forbidden the notice shall be void and the intended marriage shall not be solemnised under that notice.

Caveat against marriage

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and that Registrar General”.

Form of ceremony

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In section 8 of the 1892 Act for subsections (2) and (3) (solemnisation of marriage in presence of marriage officer etc.) there shall be substituted the following—

(2) Every such marriage shall be solemnised— (a) at the official house of the marriage officer, with open doors, between 8 am and 6 pm, in the presence of two or more witnesses; (b) by the marriage officer or, if the parties so desire, by another person in his presence; and (c) according to such form and ceremony as the parties see fit to adopt. (3) Where (apart from this subsection) it would not be stated or otherwise indicated in the course of the ceremony adopted by the parties that neither of them knows of any lawful impediment to their marriage, then, in some part of the ceremony and in the presence of the marriage officer and witnesses, they shall each declare— - ‘I solemnly declare that I know not of any lawful impediment why I A.B. [or C.D.] may not be joined in matrimony to C.D. [or A.B.].’ (4) Where (apart from this subsection) it would not be stated by each of the parties in the course of the ceremony adopted by them that he or she takes the other as wife or husband, then, in some part of the ceremony and in the presence of the marriage officer and witnesses, each of the parties shall say to the other— - ‘I call upon these persons here present to witness that I A.B. [or C.D.] take thee C.D. [or A.B.] to be my lawful wedded wife [or husband]’.

Amendments relating to the registration of marriages

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In this section“the Marriage Registration Acts” means the enactments for the time being in force in England and Wales relating to the registration of marriages.

Marriages of children of members of H.M. forces etc. serving abroad

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In section 22 of the 1892 Act (validity of marriages solemnised by chaplains of H.M. forces serving abroad) the proviso to subsection (1) shall be omitted and after that subsection there shall be inserted the following—

(1A) Subsection (1) above shall not apply to a marriage unless— (a) at least one of the parties to the marriage is a person who— (i) is a member of the said forces serving in the foreign territory concerned or is employed in that territory in such other capacity as may be prescribed by Order in Council; or (ii) is a child of a person falling within sub-paragraph (i) above and has his home with that person in that territory; and (b) such other conditions as may be so prescribed are complied with. (1B) In determining for the purposes of subsection (1A) above whether one person is the child of another— (a) it shall be immaterial whether the person’s father and mother were at any time married to each other; and (b) a person who is or was treated by another as a child of the family in relation to any marriage to which that other is or was a party shall be regarded as his child.

Short title, repeals, commencement and extent

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SCHEDULES

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