Once you've obtained your marriage license, the ceremony must be performed within 90 days. If not used within 90 days, you will need to reapply. After the ceremony, the person that performed the ceremony completed the marriage license and returns it to the Recorder's Office for filing within 10 days. You can use the website link attached to check your specific County for further marriage license information.
California does not recognize common law marriage. However, if you live in a state that does recognize common law marriage and meet the requirements of that state, your marriage will be recognized by the state of California if you move there.
As long as you are old enough. Yes you can pay for your license and turn around and get married right outside as long as the person officiating the marriage is qualified to do so.
The only way to get rid of an arrest warrant is to turn yourself in and face your punishment. Anything else would mean you are evading police and the punishment will be worse.
Sort of. The Ohio DMV can report a violation California. California may then in turn suspend the license until the infraction in Ohio is cleared up.
When you turn 16 w/parent permission and after you have done the necessary classes. Or at 18
If you have parental permission you can get a marriage license. Otherwise, you have to wait until you turn 18.
You Should Be Able To Get A Copy From The Clerks Office In State And County Of Marriage. Call They Will Tell You The Person To See. * A marriage license is not "turned in", either the couple are married or the license expires and is no longer valid. A license that was issued more than a year ago would by now have expired if the marriage never took place. A marriage license is not proof of a valid marriage. The document that verifies a legal marriage is the marriage certificate which is signed by the person who performs the ceremony (minister, judge, JP, etc.)and filed with the vital records division in the state where the marriage takes place. Likewise, a copy of the certificate can be obtained from the state's division of vital records in the state where the marriage was performed.
The prospective spouse goes to the marriage license department of the local courthouse and asks for a proxy marriage form and fills out their part and makes sure that they fill in the persons name that is going to stand in for the absent spouse; mails it to the person incarcerated. They in turn fill in their part sign it and have it notarized and send it back to the prospective spouse. Then at that time the prospective spouse may take that form back to the marriage license department and apply for a marriage license. There is a fee for the marriage license and there is only 30 days to get together with the person who is going to stand in for the absent spouse with clergy or JP. The clergy or JP will preform the ceremony as normal and then will fill out their part and turn it in to be recorded by the court clerk and the court clerk returns marriage license to the spouse who is on the outside.
A marriage license gives authority to get married in the state it was issued. A marriage certificate is valid almost all over the world.
No. You have 30 days from the date that the license was issued to turn it in (or at least that's the rule here). When they give you the license, it's needing to be taken and signed. It is the judge's or reverend's job to make sure it's turned in and he/she could be in big trouble. If you don't turn it back in, how do they know that you didn't just change your mind about getting married? They won't. So there is no record of your marriage unless the license is turned in.
He can drive outside of the state. You, however, cannot until you turn 21.
Some states have a common law marriage, where if two persons are living together for more than three or four years. Then they are recognised as being married. Now if you have the license then I would turn it in to the county clerk.