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FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - LONG TITLE An Act to consolidate Enactments relating to the Marriage of British Subjects outside the United Kingdom. [27th June 1892] Validity of marriages solemnised abroad in manner provided by Act. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 1 1. All marriages between parties of whom one at least is a British subject solemnised in the manner in this Act provided in any foreign country or place by or before a marriage officer within the meaning of this Act shall be as valid in law as if the same had been solemnised in the United Kingdom with a due observance of all forms required by law. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 2 Notice to marriage officer of intended marriage. 2. In every case of a marriage intended to be solemnised under this Act, one of the parties intending marriage shall sign a notice, stating the name, surname, profession, condition, and residence of each of the parties, and whether each of the parties is or is not a minor, and give the notice to the marriage officer within whose district both of the parties have had their residence not less than one week then next preceding, and the notice shall state that they have so resided. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 3 Filing in registry and posting up of notice. 3.(1) The marriage officer shall file every such notice, and keep it with the archives of his office, and shall also, on payment of the proper fee, forthwith enter in a book of notices to be kept by him for the purpose, and post up in some conspicuous place in his office, a true copy of every such notice, and shall keep the same so posted up during fourteen consecutive days before the marriage is solemnised under the notice. (2) The said book and copy posted up shall be open at all reasonable times, without fee, to the inspection of any person. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 4 Requirement of like consent to marriage as in England, and power to forbid marriage. 4.(1) The like consent shall be required to a marriage under this Act as is required by law to marriages solemnised in England. [Provided that, if a Secretary of State or, in such cases as may be prescribed, the Registrar-General of Births, Deaths, and Marriages in England, Scotland or Northern Ireland, is satisfied that the consent of any person whose consent is so required cannot be obtained by reason of absence or inaccessibility or by reason of his being under any disability, the Secretary of State or, as the case may be, the said Registrar-General may dispense with the necessity of obtaining his consent.] (2) Every person whose consent to a marriage is so required may, at any time before the solemnisation thereof under this Act, forbid it by writing the word "forbidden" opposite to the entry of the intended marriage in the book of notices, and by subscribing thereto his name and residence, and the character by reason of which he is authorised to forbid the marriage; and if a marriage is so forbidden the notice shall be void, and the intended marriage shall not be solemnised under that notice. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 5 Caveat against marriages may be lodged with marriage officer. 5.(1) Any person may on payment of the proper fee enter with the marriage officer a caveat, signed by him or on his behalf, and stating his residence and the ground of his objection against the solemnisation of the marriage of any person named therein, and thereupon the marriage of that person shall not be solemnised until either the marriage officer has examined into the matter of the caveat and is satisfied that it ought not to obstruct the solemnisation of the marriage, or the caveat is withdrawn by the person entering it. (2) In a case of doubt the marriage officer may transmit a copy of the caveat, with such statement respecting it as he thinks fit, to a Secretary of State, who shall refer the same to the Registrar-General, and the Registrar-General shall give his decision thereon in writing to the Secretary of State, who shall communicate it to the marriage officer. (3) If the marriage officer refuses to solemnise or to allow to be solemnised in his presence the marriage of any person requiring it to be solemnised, that person may appeal to a Secretary of State, who shall give the marriage officer his decision thereon. (4) The marriage officer shall forthwith inform the parties of and shall conform to any decision given by the Registrar-General or Secretary of State. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 6 When marriage not solemnised within three months a new notice required. 6. Where a marriage is not solemnised within three months next after the latest of the following dates (a)the date on which the notice for it has been given to and entered by the marriage officer under this Act, or (b)if on a caveat being entered a statement has been transmitted to a Secretary of State, or if an appeal has been made to a Secretary of State, then the date of the receipt from the Secretary of State of a decision directing the marriage to be solemnised, Oath before marriage. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 7 7. Before a marriage is solemnised under this Act, each of the parties intending marriage shall appear before the marriage officer, and make, and subscribe in a book kept by the officer for the purpose, an oath (a)that he or she believes that there is not any impediment to the marriage by reason of kindred or alliance, or otherwise; and (b)that both of the parties have for three weeks immediately preceding had their usual residence within the district of the marriage officer; and (c)where either of the parties, not being a widower or widow, is under the age of [eighteen years], that the consent of the persons whose consent to the marriage is required by law has been obtained thereto, or, as the case may be, that there is no person having authority to give such consent [or that the necessity of obtaining such consent has been dispensed with]. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 8 Solemnisation of marriage at office in presence of marriage officer and two witnesses. 8.(1) After the expiration of fourteen days after the notice of an intended marriage has been entered under this Act, then, if no lawful impediment to the marriage is shown to the satisfaction of the marriage officer, and the marriage has not been forbidden in manner provided by this Act, the marriage may be solemnised under this Act. (2) Every such marriage shall be solemnised at the official house of the marriage officer, with open doors, between the hours of [eight in the forenoon and six in the afternoon] in the presence of two or more witnesses, and may be solemnised by another person in the presence of the marriage officer, according to the rites of the Church of England, or such other form and ceremony as the parties thereto see fit to adopt, or may, where the parties so desire, be solemnised by the marriage officer. (3) Where such marriage is not solemnised according to the rites of the Church of England, then in some part of the ceremony, and in the presence of the marriage officer and witnesses, each of the parties shall 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.]." "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]." FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 9 Marriage fees to marriage officer and registration of marriages. 9.(1) The marriage officer shall be entitled, for every marriage solemnised under this Act by him or in his presence, to have from the parties married the proper fee. (2) He shall forthwith register in duplicate every such marriage in two marriage register books, which shall be furnished to him from time to time for that purpose by the Registrar-General (through a Secretary of State), according to the form provided by law for the registration of marriages in England, or as near to that form as the difference of the circumstances admits. (3) The entry in each book of every such marriage shall be signed by the marriage officer, by the person solemnising the marriage, if other than the marriage officer, by both the parties married, and by two witnesses of the marriage. (4) All such entries shall be made in regular order from the beginning to the end of each book, and the number of the entry in each duplicate shall be the same. (5) The marriage officer by whom or in whose presence a marriage is solemnised under this Act may ask of the parties to be married the several particulars required to be registered touching the marriage. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 10 Annual forwarding of copies of register book to Secretary of State. 10.(1) In January in every year every marriage officer shall make and send to a Secretary of State, to be transmitted by him to the Registrar-General, a copy, certified by him to be a true copy, of all the entries of marriages during the preceding year in the register book kept by him, and if there has been no such entry, a certificate of that fact; and every such copy shall be certified, and certificate given, under his hand and official seal. (2) The marriage officer shall keep the duplicate marriage register books safely until they are filled, and then send one of them to a Secretary of State, to be transmitted by him to the Registrar-General. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 11 Marriage officers and their districts. 11.(1) For the purposes of this Act the following officers shall be marriage officers, that is to say: (a)Any officer authorised in that behalf by a Secretary of State by authority in writing under his hand (in this Act referred to as a marriage warrant); and (b)Any officer who, under the marriage regulations hereinafter mentioned is authorised to act as marriage officer without any marriage warrant, (2) Any marriage warrant of a Secretary of State may authorise to be a marriage officer (a)a British ambassador residing in a foreign country to the government of which he is accredited, and also any officer prescribed as an officer for solemnising marriages, in the official house of such ambassador; (b)the holder of the office of British consul in any foreign country or place specified in the warrant; and (c)a governor, high commissioner, resident, consular or other officer, or any person appointed in pursuance of the marriage regulations to act in the place of a high commissioner or resident, and this Act shall apply with the prescribed modifications to a marriage by or before a governor, high commissioner, resident, or officer so authorised by the warrant, and in such application shall not be limited to places outside Her Majesty's dominions. (3) If a marriage warrant refers to the office without designating the name of any particular person holding the office, then, while the warrant is in force, the person for the time being holding or acting in such office shall be a marriage officer. (4) A Secretary of State may, by warrant under his hand, vary or revoke any marriage warrant previously issued under this Act. (5) Where a marriage officer has no seal of his office, any reference in this Act to the official seal shall be construed to refer to any seal ordinarily used by him, if authenticated by his signature with his official name and description. S.12 rep. by 1947 c.33 s.4(1) FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 13 Avoidance of objections to marriages on account of want of formalities or authority of officer. 13.(1) After a marriage has been solemnised under this Act it shall not be necessary, in support of the marriage, to give any proof of the residence for the time required by or in pursuance of this Act of either of the parties previous to the marriage, or of the consent of any person whose consent thereto is required by law, nor shall any evidence to prove the contrary be given in any legal proceeding touching the validity of the marriage. (2) Where a marriage purports to have been solemnised and registered under this Act in the official house of a British ambassador or consul, ... it shall not be necessary in support of the marriage, to give any proof of the authority of the marriage officer by or before whom the marriage was solemnised and registered, nor shall any evidence to prove his want of authority, whether by reason of his not being a duly authorised marriage officer or of any prohibitions or restrictions under the marriage regulations or otherwise, be given in any legal proceeding touching the validity of the marriage. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 14 Forfeiture of property in case of fraudulent marriage. 14. If a marriage is solemnised under this Act by means of any wilfully false notice signed, or oath made by either party to the marriage, as to any matter for which a notice, or oath, is by this Act required, the Attorney-General may sue for the forfeiture of all estate and interest in any property in England accruing to the offending party by the marriage; and the proceedings thereupon, and the consequences thereof, shall be the same as are provided by law in the like case with regard to marriages solemnised in England according to the rites of the Church of England. S.15 rep. by 1979 NI 19 art.19(2) sch.2 FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 16 Evidence. 16.(1) Any book, notice, or document directed by this Act to be kept by the marriage officer or in the archives of his office, shall be of such a public nature as to be admissible in evidence on its mere production from the custody of the officer. (2) A certificate of a Secretary of State as to any house, office, chapel, or other place being, or being part of, the official house of a British ambassador or consul shall be conclusive. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 17 Application of Registration Acts to this Act. 17. All the provisions and penalties of the Marriage Registration Acts, relating to any registrar, or register of marriages, or certified copies thereof, shall extend to every marriage officer, and to the registers of marriages under this Act, and to the certified copies thereof (so far as the same are applicable thereto), as if herein re-enacted and in terms made applicable to this Act, and as if every marriage officer were a registrar under the said Acts. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 18 Registration of marriages solemnised under local law. 18.(1) Subject to the marriage regulations, a British consul, or person authorised to act as British consul, on being satisfied by personal attendance that a marriage between parties, of whom one at least is a British subject, has been duly solemnised in a foreign country, in accordance with the local law of the country, and on payment of the proper fee, may register the marriage in accordance with the marriage regulations as having been so solemnised, and thereupon this Act shall apply as if the marriage had been registered in pursuance of this Act, except that nothing in this Act shall affect the validity of the marriage so solemnised. [(2) In the case of such marriages solemnised as aforesaid at which a British consul, or person authorised to act as British consul, has not attended, His Majesty may by Order in Council provide in such classes of cases, and subject to such conditions, as may be prescribed by the Order (a)for the transmission to and receipt by the Registrars-General of Births, Deaths and Marriages in England, Scotland and Northern Ireland, respectively, of certificates of such marriages issued in accordance with the local law; and (b)for the issue by those Registrars-General, on payment of such fees as may be prescribed by the Order, of certified copies of such certificates received by them, and for enabling such certified copies to be received in evidence. (3) Any Order in Council made under the foregoing provisions of this section may be varied or revoked by a subsequent Order in Council, and any Order in Council made under this section shall be laid forthwith before each House of Parliament.] FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 19 Power to refuse solemnisation of marriage where marriage inconsistent with international law. 19. A marriage officer shall not be required to solemnise a marriage, or to allow a marriage to be solemnised in his presence, if in his opinion the solemnisation thereof would be inconsistent with international law or the comity of nations: Provided that any person requiring his marriage to be solemnised shall, if the officer refuses to solemnise it or allow it to be solemnised in his presence, have the right of appeal to the Secretary of State given by this Act. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 20 Fees. 20. The proper fee under this Act shall be such fee as may for the time being be fixed under the [Consular Fees Act 1980]; and the fee so fixed as respects a consul shall be the fee which may be taken by any marriage officer; and the provisions relating to the levying, application, and remission of and accounting for fees under that Act shall apply to the same when taken by any marriage officer who is not a consul. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 21 Power to make marriage regulations. 21.(1) Her Majesty the Queen in Council may make regulations (in this Act referred to as the marriage regulations) (a)Prohibiting or restricting the exercise by marriage officers of their powers under this Act in cases where the exercise of those powers appears to Her Majesty to be inconsistent with international law or the comity of nations, or in places where sufficient facilities appear to Her Majesty to exist without the exercise of those powers, for the solemnisation of marriages to which a British subject is a party; and (b)Determining what offices, chapels, or other places are, for the purposes of marriage under this Act, to be deemed to be part of the official house or the office of a marriage officer; and (c)Modifying in special cases or classes of cases the requirements of this Act as to residence and notice, so far as such modification appears to Her Majesty to be consistent with the observance of due precautions against clandestine marriages; and (d)Prescribing the forms to be used under this Act; and (e)Adapting this Act ... to marriages by or before a governor, high commissioner, resident, or other officer, and authorising the appointment of a person to act under this Act in the place of a high commissioner or resident; and (f)Determining who is to be the marriage officer for the purpose of a marriage in the official house of a British ambassador, ... whether such officer is described in the regulations or named in pursuance thereof, and authorising such officer to act without any marriage warrant; and (g)Determining the conditions under which and the mode in which marriages solemnised in accordance with the local law of a foreign country may be registered under this Act; and (h)Making such provisions as seem necessary or proper for carrying into effect this Act or any marriage regulations; and (i)Varying or revoking any marriage regulations previously made. (2) All regulations purporting to be made in pursuance of this section may be made either generally or with reference to any particular case or class of cases, and shall be published under the authority of Her Majesty's Stationery Office, and laid before both Houses of Parliament, and deemed to be within the powers of this Act, and shall while in force have effect as if enacted by this Act. (3) Any marriage regulations which dispense for any reason, whether residence out of the district or otherwise, with the requirements of this Act as to residence and notice, may require as a condition or consequence of the dispensation, the production of such notice, certificate, or document, and the taking of such oath, and may authorise the publication or grant of such notice, certificate, or document, and the charge of such fees as may be prescribed by the regulations; and the provisions of this Act, including those enacting punishments with reference to any false notice or oath, shall apply as if the said notice, certificate, or document were a notice, and such oath were an oath, within the meaning of those provisions.[ FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 22 Validity of marriages solemnised by chaplains of H.M. forces serving abroad and other persons. 22.(1) A marriage solemnised in any foreign territory by a chaplain serving with any part of the naval, military or air forces of His Majesty serving in that territory or by a person authorised, either generally or in respect of the particular marriage, by the commanding officer of any part of those forces serving in that territory shall, subject as hereinafter provided, be as valid in law as if the marriage had been solemnised in the United Kingdom with a due observance of all forms required by law: Provided that this subsection shall only apply if (a)one at least of the parties to the marriage is a member of the said forces serving in that territory or a person employed in that territory in such other capacity as may be prescribed by Order in Council; and (b)such other conditions as may be so prescribed are complied with. (2) In this section the expression "foreign territory" means territory other than (a)any part of His Majesty's dominions; (b)any British protectorate; or (c)any other country or territory under His Majesty's protection or suzerainty or in which His Majesty has for the time being jurisdiction: Provided that His Majesty may by Order in Council direct that (i)any British protectorate or any such other country or territory as is referred to in paragraph (c) hereof; or (ii)any part of His Majesty's dominions which has been occupied by a State at war with His Majesty and in which the facilities for marriage in accordance with the local law have not in the opinion of His Majesty been adequately restored; (3) Any reference in this section to foreign territory, to forces serving in foreign territory and to persons employed in foreign territory shall include references to ships which are for the time being in the waters of any foreign territory, to forces serving in any such ship and to persons employed in any such ship, respectively. (4) His Majesty may by Order in Council provide for the registration of marriages solemnised under this section, and for the application thereto, with such adaptations as may be necessary, of any provisions ... of any Act (including any Act, whether passed before or after the passing of this Act, of the Parliament of Northern Ireland) for the time being in force in Northern Ireland relating to the registration of marriages, and the Order may, to such extent as may be specified therein, be made applicable to marriages solemnised under section twenty-two of the Foreign Marriage Act, 1892, as originally enacted. (5) Where a marriage purports to have been solemnised under this section, it shall not be necessary in any legal proceeding touching the validity of the marriage to prove the authority of the person by or before whom it was solemnised, nor shall any evidence to prove his want of authority be given in any such proceeding. (6) Any Order in Council made under the foregoing provisions of this section may be varied or revoked by a subsequent Order in Council, and any Order in Council made under this section shall be laid forthwith before each House of Parliament.] FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 23 Saving. 23. Nothing in this Act shall confirm or impair or in anywise affect the validity in law of any marriage solemnised beyond the seas, otherwise than as herein provided, and this Act shall not extend to the marriage of any of the Royal Family. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 24 Definitions. 24. In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires, The expression "Registrar-General" means the Registrar-General of Births, Deaths, and Marriages in England: The expression "Attorney-General" means Her Majesty's Attorney-General, or if there is no such Attorney-General, or the Attorney-General is unable or incompetent to act, Her Majesty's Solicitor-General, for England: The expression "the Marriage Registration Acts" means the Act of the session of the sixth and seventh years of the reign of King William the Fourth, chapter eighty-six, intituled "An Act for registering births, deaths, and marriages in England" and the enactments amending the same: The expression "official house of a marriage officer" means, subject to the provisions of any marriage regulations, the office at which the business of such officer is transacted, and the official house of residence of such officer, and, in the case of any officer, who is an officer for solemnising marriages in the official house of an ambassador, means the official house of the ambassador: The expression "consul" means a consul-general, consul, vice-consul, pro-consul, or consular agent: The expression "ambassador" includes a minister and a charge9 d'affaires: The expression "prescribed" means prescribed by marriage regulations under this Act. S.25 rep. by SLR 1908 FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 26 Repeal and savings. 26.(1) ... Para.(a) rep. by SLR 1908 (b)any proceedings taken with reference to a marriage, any register book kept, and any warrant issued in pursuance of the Acts hereby repealed, shall have effect as if taken, kept, and issued in pursuance of the Act; and Paras.(c)(d) rep. by SLR 1908 (2) Every marriage in fact solemnised and registered by or before a British consul or other marriage officer in intended pursuance of any Act hereby repealed shall, notwithstanding such repeal or any defect in the authority of the consul or the solemnisation of the marriage elsewhere than at the consulate, be as valid as if the said Act had not been repealed and the marriage had been solemnised at the consulate by or before a duly authorised consul; Provided that this enactment shall not render valid any marriage declared invalid before the passing of this Act by any competent court, or render valid any marriage either of the parties to which has, before the passing of this Act, lawfully intermarried with any other person. FOREIGN MARRIAGE ACT 1892 - SECT 27 Short title. 27. This Act may be cited as the Foreign Marriage Act, 1892. Schedule rep. by SLR 1908