“Taking Marriage Private”
By STEPHANIE COONTZ
Published in The New York Times on November
26, 2007.
Olympia, Wash.
WHY do people — gay or straight —
need the state’s permission to marry? For most of Western history, they didn’t,
because marriage was a private contract between two families. The parents’
agreement to the match, not the approval of church or state, was what confirmed
its validity.
For 16 centuries, Christianity also
defined the validity of a marriage on the basis of a couple’s wishes. If two
people claimed they had exchanged marital vows — even out alone by the haystack
— the Catholic Church accepted that they were validly married.
In 1215, the church decreed that a
“licit” marriage must take place in church. But people who married illictly had
the same rights and obligations as a couple married in church: their children
were legitimate; the wife had the same inheritance rights; the couple was
subject to the same prohibitions against divorce.
Not until the 16th century did
European states begin to require that marriages be performed under legal
auspices. In part, this was an attempt to prevent unions between young adults
whose parents opposed their match.
The American colonies officially
required marriages to be registered, but until the mid-19th century, state
supreme courts routinely ruled that public cohabitation was sufficient evidence
of a valid marriage. By the later part of that century, however, the United
States began to nullify common-law marriages and exert more control over who
was allowed to marry.
By the 1920s, 38 states prohibited
whites from marrying blacks, “mulattos,” Japanese, Chinese, Indians,
“Mongolians,” “Malays” or Filipinos. Twelve states would not issue a marriage
license if one partner was a drunk, an addict or a “mental defect.” Eighteen
states set barriers to remarriage after divorce.
In the mid-20th century, governments
began to get out of the business of deciding which couples were “fit” to marry.
Courts invalidated laws against interracial marriage, struck down other
barriers and even extended marriage rights to prisoners.
But governments began relying on
marriage licenses for a new purpose: as a way of distributing resources to
dependents. The Social Security Act provided survivors’ benefits with proof of
marriage. Employers used marital status to determine whether they would provide
health insurance or pension benefits to employees’ dependents. Courts and
hospitals required a marriage license before granting couples the privilege of
inheriting from each other or receiving medical information.
In the 1950s, using the marriage
license as a shorthand way to distribute benefits and legal privileges made
some sense because almost all adults were married. Cohabitation and single
parenthood by choice were very rare.
Today, however, possession of a marriage
license tells us little about people’s interpersonal responsibilities. Half of
all Americans aged 25 to 29 are unmarried, and many of them already have
incurred obligations as partners, parents or both. Almost 40 percent of
America’s children are born to unmarried parents. Meanwhile, many legally
married people are in remarriages where their obligations are spread among
several households.
Using the existence of a marriage
license to determine when the state should protect interpersonal relationships
is increasingly impractical. Society has already recognized this when it comes
to children, who can no longer be denied inheritance rights, parental support
or legal standing because their parents are not married.
As Nancy Polikoff, an American
University law professor, argues, the marriage license no longer draws
reasonable dividing lines regarding which adult obligations and rights merit
state protection. A woman married to a man for just nine months gets Social
Security survivor’s benefits when he dies. But a woman living for 19 years with
a man to whom she isn’t married is left without government support, even if her
presence helped him hold down a full-time job and pay Social Security taxes. A
newly married wife or husband can take leave from work to care for a spouse, or
sue for a partner’s wrongful death. But unmarried couples typically cannot, no
matter how long they have pooled their resources and how faithfully they have
kept their commitments.
Possession of a marriage license is
no longer the chief determinant of which obligations a couple must keep, either to their children or to each other. But
it still determines which obligations a couple can
keep — who gets hospital visitation rights, family leave, health care and
survivor’s benefits. This may serve the purpose of some moralists. But it
doesn’t serve the public interest of helping individuals meet their care-giving
commitments.
Perhaps it’s time to revert to a
much older marital tradition. Let churches decide which marriages they deem
“licit.” But let couples — gay or straight — decide if they want the legal
protections and obligations of a committed relationship.
Stephanie Coontz, a professor of
history at Evergreen State College, is the author of “Marriage, a History: How
Love Conquered Marriage.”