Senate Bill No. 507

(By Senator Miller)

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[Introduced February 19, 1996; referred to the Committee on the Judiciary.]
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A BILL to repeal sections six-a, six-b and six-c, article one, chapter forty-eight of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended; and to amend and reenact sections six and six-d of said article, all relating to eliminating the blood test and three-day waiting period required prior to the issuance of a marriage license.

Be it enacted by the Legislature of West Virginia:
That sections six-a, six-b and six-c, article one, chapter forty-eight of the code of West Virginia, one thousand nine hundred thirty-one, as amended, be repealed; and that sections six and six-d of said article one be amended and reenacted, all to read as follows:
ARTICLE 1. MARRIAGE.

§§48-1-6. Application for license; requirements for issuance of license.
Every license for marriage shall be issued by the clerk of the county commission of the county in which either party usually resides, except that where both parties are nonresidents of the state of West Virginia, the license shall be issued by the clerk of the county commission of the county in which application is made. The license shall be issued not sooner than three days after the filing with the clerk of a written application therefor. The day on which the application is filed shall be counted as the first day, but two full days shall elapse after the day of filing before the license shall be issued. Before any license is issued, each applicant shall file with the clerk a certificate or certificates from any physician duly licensed in the state, stating that each party has been given an examination, including a standard serological test, as may be necessary for the discovery of syphilis, made not more than thirty days prior to the date on which license is issued, and stating that in the opinion of the physician the applicant either is not infected with syphilis or, if so infected, is not in the state of the disease which is or may later become communicable. The examinations and tests required by this section may be given as provided by section nineteen, article four, chapter sixteen of this code.
The application for a marriage license shall contain a statement of the full names of both parties, their social security account numbers, their respective ages and their places of birth and residence. Effective the first day of September, one thousand nine hundred ninety-three, the application for a marriage license shall also contain the following statement:
"The laws of this state affirm your right to enter into this marriage and at the same time to live within the marriage free from violence and abuse. Neither of you is the property of the other. Physical abuse, sexual abuse, battery and assault of a spouse or other family member, as well as other provisions of the criminal laws of this state, are applicable to spouses and other family members and violations thereof are punishable by law."
It shall be signed by both of the parties to the contemplated marriage, under oath before the clerk of the county commission or before a person authorized to administer oaths under the laws of this state. At the time of the execution of the application, the clerk, or the person administering the oath to the applicants, shall require some evidence of the age of each of the applicants. Evidence of the age of each applicant may be in the form of a certified or photostatic copy of a birth certificate, a voter's registration certificate, an operator's or chauffeur's license, an affidavit of both parents or legal guardian of the applicant or other good and sufficient evidence. Where such an affidavit is relied upon as evidence of the age of an applicant, and one parent is dead, the affidavit of the surviving parent or of the guardian of the applicant shall suffice; if both parents are dead, the affidavit of the guardian of the applicant shall suffice. If the parents of the applicant are living separate and apart, the affidavit of the parent having custody of the applicant shall suffice. The application shall be recorded in the register of marriages provided for in section eleven of this article. The date of the filing of the application shall be noted in the register. The notation, or a certified copy thereof, is legal evidence of the facts therein contained.
To the extent otherwise provided by section six-c of this article, the provisions of this section do not apply. Applications for licenses may be received and licenses may be issued by the clerk of the county commission at anytime his or her office is officially open for the conduct of business.
§48-1-6d. Offenses and penalties.

Any applicant for a marriage license, any physician or representative of a laboratory who shall knowingly misrepresent any of the facts called for in the physician's statement or laboratory report, respectively; and any clerk of the county court commission or other licensing authority who shall make a false entry as to the date of application for a marriage license; and any clerk of the county court commission or other licensing authority who shall issue a marriage license prior to the end of the required three-day period or without the required physician's statement and laboratory report (unless these shall have been dispensed with by judicial order pursuant to section six-c), or who shall issue such license despite his or her having reason to believe that any of the facts contained in said statement or report have been misrepresented, or shall issue a license on any Sunday or after five o'clock p.m. and before eight o'clock a.m. on any weekday, or who shall receive an application for such license or issue any such license in any place other than the office of such licensing authority, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and, upon conviction thereof, shall be punished by a fine of not less than two hundred nor more than one thousand dollars, or by confinement in jail for not less than three nor more than nine months, or by both such fine and confinement in the discretion of the court; or if any clerk of the county court commission or other licensing authority shall otherwise knowingly issue a marriage license contrary to law, he or she shall be guilty of a misdemeanor, and, upon conviction thereof, shall be punished by a fine not exceeding five hundred dollars, or by confinement in jail not more than one year, or by both such fine and confinement in the discretion of the court.




NOTE: The purpose of this bill is to eliminate the requirement for a blood test and three-day waiting period prior to the issuance of a marriage certificate inasmuch as the procedure is generally obsolete. West Virginia is one of the very few states that still require such test and waiting period.

Strike-throughs indicate language that would be stricken from the present law, and underscoring indicates new language that would be added.