List of cousin marriage court cases in the United States

The following is a list of United States court cases on cousin marriage. Currently only certain cases at the appellate level in the last sixty years are listed.

Case law

Name Date Forum Description
Ex parte BowenMarch 21, 1952Court of Appeals of Kentucky[lower-alpha 1]Held that due to the new Kentucky statute, the marriage was void and the veterans benefits should be denied to the spouse.
Matter of the Estate of Martin Emil Mortenson, deceasedOctober 29, 1957Supreme Court of ArizonaCousin marriage not recognized because Arizona statutes declare the marriage "void" unless it was recognized in the place where solemnized, with the parties having resided in that place. In this case, the parties resided in Arizona and left to have the marriage solemnized in New Mexico. Wife received no share of the estate.
Mazzolini v. MazzoliniDecember 24, 1958Supreme Court of OhioHeld that because it was not declared void in statute, a cousin marriage solemnized elsewhere was valid in Ohio. Annulment not granted.
In re the Marriage of Earl E. AdamsDecember 31, 1979Supreme Court of MontanaHeld that a first cousin marriage in Montana, where it was prohibited and where the courts were bound to declare it as void, was indeed void. The wife received no portion of the estate.
In the Matter of the Estate of Owen C. Loughmiller, DeceasedJune 10, 1981Supreme Court of KansasFound that a marriage entered into outside the state of Kansas was valid because there is no statute in Kansas specifically voiding the marriage. The marriage was found valid and the separation agreement between the two parties was upheld.
Etheridge v. ShaddockApril 7, 1986Supreme Court of ArkansasFound that a cousin marriage performed elsewhere was legal in Arkansas. A disputed change in child custody rights was therefore denied. Incidentally, it noted that a marriage between other closer relatives would not be recognized in this situation.[1]
Cook v. CookJanuary 13, 2005Court of Appeals of Arizona, Division 1, Department AFound that a cousin marriage performed elsewhere should be recognized because Arizona law at the time expressly directed such recognition, and although it was amended after the marriage, retroactive application of the law was not called for. Consequently, dissolution of the marriage was not granted.

See also

Notes

  1. At the time of this decision, the Court of Appeals was Kentucky's only appellate body. Following a 1975 state constitutional amendment, the Court of Appeals became an intermediate body under the new Supreme Court of Kentucky.

References

  1. Etheridge v. Shaddock Archived 2013-09-09 at the Wayback Machine (PDF), 288 Ark. 481, 706 S.W.2d 395 (1986).
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