This article provides answers to common questions about void marriages in Texas. This article was written by the Self-Represented Litigants Project at the Texas Legal Services Center.
A suit to declare a marriage void is a legal process where a marriage is determined to be void from the very beginning because there are facts that prevent a legal marriage from being created. It is as though the marriage never happened. This is regardless of whether a court rules it so, and the spouses cannot otherwise agree that it is a valid marriage.
Practically, however, a void marriage can have lasting effects on the spouses to the void marriage in the areas of property and children.
The void marriage statutes can be found in Chapter 6 of the Texas Family Code.
If there are children adopted by or born to the parents or during the marriage, a Suit Affecting the Parent-Child Relationship must also be included as part of the suit to declare a marriage void petition.
As for property, the court will consider whether the petitioner
Generally, putative spouses will have similar property rights as a divorcing spouse and are eligible for spousal maintenance. In a meretricious relationship, however, those spouses are treated differently although other legal theories can be used in asking for property. Meretricious spouses are not eligible for spousal maintenance.
If your case involves property or children adopted or born during the marriage, you should strongly consider getting help from legal aid or a private attorney (at least through limited scope representation).
To be a putative spouse a spouse must have had a good faith belief in the validity of the marriage and not have known about facts that would make the marriage void.
To determine if a spouse had this good faith belief, courts in Texas have considered some of the following factors:
Consider looking at the void marriage sections of books like O'Connors Texas Family Law Handbook at your nearest law library for a larger discussion of how a court determines if a spouse is a putative spouse or not.
The requirements to file for a divorce in Texas do not apply to suits to declare a marriage void.
To be able to file this lawsuit in Texas, either
The petition to declare a marriage void can be filed in the county where all or a large part of the relevant facts or acts leading to the void marriage happened or where the petitioner or the other party lived when the facts, acts, and marriage took place.
For the most part, the courts that can decide divorce cases can also decide suits to declare a marriage void. These lawsuits can also be filed in county courts as well. Call your local district clerk and ask which courts in your county handle void marriage cases.
No, there is no waiting period required between the filing and the court granting a suit to declare the marriage void. However, it is not likely that the court will be able to grant it right away due the judge’s busy schedule. At the very least, it can be expected to take a few weeks.
A divorce will end a valid marriage. A suit to declare a marriage void will consider the marriage to not be valid from the beginning and therefore to legally never have existed.
Practically, however, a void marriage can have lasting effects on the spouses to the void marriage in the areas of property and children.
Like an annulment, a suit to declare a marriage void focuses on reasons why it wasn’t a valid marriage at the start of the marriage.
However, unlike an annulment, a void marriage is automatically not legally a valid marriage from the start whether or not a court decides it so. The parties cannot agree to it being a legally valid marriage. The Texas Family Code lists specific grounds for void marriages and separate ones for annulments.
In Texas, there are several grounds under which a person can file a suit to declare a marriage void:
See Texas Family Code chapters 6.201 through 6.206.
If the parties are related to each other in one of the following ways, either by blood or by adoption, the marriage is void:
It should be noted that while the void marriage section of the Texas Family Code does not explicitly prohibit marriage between whole or half first cousins, either by blood or by adoption, clerks are unable to issue marriage licenses to these individuals.
See Texas Family Code chapter 6.201.
If either spouse was still married when he or she married, then the most recent marriage is void.
The spouse filing the suit to declare the marriage void has to prove that his or her spouse was married before and that the earlier marriage did not end by death, divorce, or annulment. The petitioner would have to show that the other party’s first spouse was alive and did not die on the date the petitioner married the other party. Further, the petitioner has to prove that he or she looked for a divorce or annulment in every county that the other party and his or her previous spouse might have filed paperwork.
See Texas Family Code chapter 6.202.
A marriage considered void on the grounds of bigamy can turn into a common-law marriage once the previous marriage has been ended if both spouses continue to live together and hold themselves out as married. The common-law marriage then begins on the day the previous marriage has legally ended.
A marriage is void if either party to the marriage is under the age of 18, unless a court order removing the disabilities of minority of the party for general purposes has been obtained.
See Texas Family Code chapter 6.205.
If one spouse is a current or former stepparent to the other spouse, the marriage is void.
See Texas Family Code chapter 2.606.
No. A marriage between two people of the same sex is a valid marriage.
While the Texas Family Code still makes the marriage between two people of the same sex void, the United States Supreme Court in 2015 ruled that same-sex marriages are legal in the case Obergefell vs. Hodges. The Supreme Court overruled then existing Texas law. This decision applies to everyone in Texas as well as the entire United States. This means that same-sex marriages are not automatically void.
Getting legal advice from a lawyer now can save you time and money in the long run. This is true especially if you have children or if you or your spouse has a retirement account, house, or other valuable property. An attorney can review your situation for potential issues that can arise.
The State Bar of Texas Lawyer Referral Information Service at (800) 252-9690 can help you find a private lawyer. You can ask for a lawyer willing to accept reduced fee arrangements or are willing to provide limited scope representation, also known as unbundling. This is an arrangement where you just want advice but don’t want the attorney to go to court with you.
If you are low income, you may qualify for free help from legal aid. Regardless of income, you may get free legal advice at walk-in legal clinics. For more information, please click here.