Putative Spouses

putative marriage, wedding cake

Colorado has adopted the putative spouse doctrine, which allows a person to claim the rights of a marital relationship in the absence of a legal marriage. Putative spouse cases are few and far between - they are rare enough that most family attorneys, including Graham.Law, have likely not litigated a putative spouse case. There is also scarce guidance from the courts on the facts necessary to establish someone as a “putative spouse.”

Definition of Putative Spouse

Per C.R.S. 14-2-111, a putative spouse is “any person who has cohabitated with another to whom he is not legally married in the good faith belief that he was married to that person…” C.R.S. 14-2-211.

A putative spouse statute may be thought of as a “fallback” in case someone has a good faith belief in marriage, but cannot establish the existence of either a ceremonial or a common law marriage. However, a putative spouse should not be confused with the concept of palimony, where some states (not Colorado) confer financial benefits on a person in a relationship which ended, even though the couple themselves knew they were never married.

Factors To Determine Putative Spouse

As indicated, there is very little precedent on what qualifies as a putative spouse. This necessarily means that the outcome of each case will be very fact-specific.

The few cases there are agree on one point, however - if the would-be putative spouse knows that the other party is still legally married to someone else, he/she cannot have a good faith to be a putative spouse. People v. McGuire, 751 P.2d 1011 (Colo.App. 1987). And that applies even if the couple underwent a “celestial” or some other spiritual ceremony - a person cannot have two spouses, so knowledge of another marriage negates a putative spouse claim. Combs vs. Tibbitts, 148 P.3d 430 (Colo.App. 2006).

However, a would-be spouse who was unaware that the other spouse was still legally married has a putative spouse claim. In Williams v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Co., 670 P.2d 453 (Colo.App. 1983), the couple went through a formal wedding ceremony, lived together, and had a child. But there was a problem - the husband was still technically married, as a California court had previously entered an interlocutory judgment dissolving that prior marriage, but that judgment was never finalized. The court found that the wife was a putative spouse with all the rights and benefits of a spouse, as she was unaware of the illegality of her marriage.

So who has a potential putative spouse claim? Realistically, it's likely limited to someone who tried to marry, going through a marriage ceremony or meeting the common law marriage requirements and is seemingly married, but is unaware of the facts or legal barriers which would make the marriage void - such as a problem in the ceremony, or the fact that the other party were still married.

Here's a news article about a real-world example of what courts would likely treat as a putative marriage - a California couple which went through a wedding ceremony back in 1964, but had apparently not complied with the marriage license requirement. Unbeknownst to them, their “marriage” of the past 5 decades was not legal.

Legal Rights Of Putative Spouse

Per C.R.S. 14-2-111, a putative spouse has all of the rights of a legal spouse, including maintenance, property division, etc. However, if the other party actually has a legal spouse, then the putative spouse's rights do not supersede the legal spouse's rights. Instead, the court “shall apportion property, maintenance, and support rights among the claimants as appropriate in the circumstances and in the interests of justice.”

Once a party learns that the marriage is not valid, he/she ceases to be a putative spouse, and does not acquire any further rights as a putative spouse from that time onwards. Note that this does not take away any putative spouse rights already acquired, however.

The Social Security Administration recognizes a putative spouse, and confers benefits on a claimant who can establish her/himself as a putative spouse. SSR 80-2. But see PR05705.007 - the federal government is not bound by a determination from a Colorado family law court that someone is a putative spouse, and can substitute its own judgment if it believes that the state court was wrong.

More Information

Wikipedia article on Putative Marriage.

Do You Need a Divorce Lawyer in Colorado Springs?

The family law attorneys at Graham.Law have years of experience helping clients through the Colorado legal system. We know Colorado family laws, inside and out, from divorce to legal separation, from annulment to military divorce issues. In short, we understand marriage and divorce. For more information about our El Paso County family law firm, click on:

Colorado family law is all we do. Period.

Tag: