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Civil partnership in the United Kingdom

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File:Vicarcivilpart.jpg
Metropolitan Community Church vicar Debbie Gaston (right) with partner Elaine celebrating their Civil Partnership outside Brighton Town Hall on 21 December 2005

Civil partnerships in the United Kingdom, granted under the Civil Partnership Act 2004, give same-sex couples rights and responsibilities identical to civil marriage. Civil Partners are entitled to the same property rights as married opposite-sex couples, the same exemption as married couples on inheritance tax, social security and pension benefits, and also the ability to get parental responsibility for a partner's children,[1] as well as responsibility for reasonable maintenance of one's partner and their children, tenancy rights, full life insurance recognition, next-of-kin rights in hospitals, and others. There is a formal process for dissolving partnerships akin to divorce.

Law and procedure

A civil partnership is a relationship between two people of the same sex, formed when they register as civil partners of each other, which ends only on death, dissolution or annulment. Part 2 of the Act relates to England and Wales, Part 3 to Scotland and Part 4 to Northern Ireland.

Formation and registration

A civil partnership is formed when the second individual signs the civil partnership document in the presence of a registrar and in the presence of each other and two witnesses.

There is to be no religious service during the registration and the registration cannot take place in any premises that are either designed for or are in use mainly or solely for religious purposes. In Scotland, however, all of the mainstream churches, except the Catholic church, offer blessing ceremonies for same-sex couples.

Before registration under the standard procedure, each party will usually have to give notice to the registration authority. Each party must have resided in their home country, (England, Northern Ireland, or Wales) for at least seven days immediately preceding the giving of notice and there will, in most cases, be a fifteen-day waiting period after notice is given. (In Scotland there is no minimum residence requirement as this is not required to contract a valid marriage.) During the waiting period, the proposed partnership will be publicised and anyone may make a formal objection. If there is such an objection, the proposed civil partnership cannot be formed unless the objection is withdrawn or if the registration authority is satisfied that the objection ought not to prevent the formation of the civil partnership. Provided no objection has been recorded or any recorded objections have been cleared, the registration authority must issue a civil partnership schedule at the request of either party upon the expiration of the waiting period. The civil partnership must then be registered within 12 months of when the notice was first given.

There are also specific registration procedures that apply to particular circumstances - the housebound, detained persons and the seriously ill in danger of death.

A civil partnership in Wales (Welsh: Partneriaeth Sifil) may be conducted either in English or in Welsh, provided that both registering parties, the registrar and witnesses are able to understand and write in the Welsh language. All Civil Partnership documents issued in Wales (irrespective of the registering language) follow a standardised bilingual English and Welsh format.

Eligibility

Each party to the civil partnership must be of the same sex and be at least 16 years old. Anyone below 18 years old will usually need parental consent, except in Scotland where parental consent is not required for marriages. Furthermore, the parties to the proposed partnership must not be within the prohibited degrees of relationship specified in part 1 of schedule 1 of the Act. Any party who is already in a marriage or a civil partnership is also ineligible to register.

Britons can register civil partnerships overseas at British consulates-general (where permitted). For overseas civil partnership registration, at least one of the two must be a British national.

Overseas couples wanting to register their partnership in the UK, must reside in the UK for seven days prior to application for the partnership, and wait a further fifteen days before the civil partnership is formed.

Gender Recognition Act

The Gender Recognition Act 2004 allows transsexual people to change their legal gender, but before doing so they must dissolve any existing marriage. This can have serious consequences for a married couple who wish to stay together after one party has changed gender. However, under special provisions of the Civil Partnership Act such couples are able to dissolve their marriage, and enter a civil partnership the same day.

Overseas relationships

Where a same-sex couple has registered an overseas relationship which is specified in Schedule 20 of the Civil Partnership Act, or meet certain general conditions, they will be treated as having formed a civil partnership. The requirements can be found in section 212 and sections 215 to 218 of the Act.

In order for an overseas relationship to meet the general conditions it must, under the law of the country or territory in which it was formed:

  • Be exclusive in nature (in other words the law must prevent a person from registering a relationship where they are already in a relationship of that kind or are lawfully married);
  • Be indeterminate in duration (this would exclude an arrangement whereby the parties agreed to live together for a fixed period of time); and
  • Result in the parties being treated as a couple or treated as married (this would exclude schemes like some local registers which have no legal effects under the law of that country or territory).

Property and financial arrangements

The position of civil partners in relation to financial arrangements mirrors that of spouses. For instance, Section 11 of the Married Women's Property Act 1882 will apply to civil partnerships. Thus, money payable to a partner under a policy of assurance effected by the other partner for his/her own life will no longer form part of the deceased partner's estate.

The laws governing wills, administration of estates and family provisions will also largely apply to civil partners as they would to spouses. Thus, provisions governing financial relief under Part 2 of the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 (MCA) and the Domestic Proceedings and Magistrates' Court Act 1978 will also apply to civil partnerships. Tax exemptions available to spouses under s.18 of the Inheritance Tax Act 1984 will be available to civil partners under the Civil Partnership Act. In Scotland the centuries old system of minimum legal rights to a deceased estate for a widowed spouse have been expressly extended to civil partners by section 131 of the Civil Partnership Act.

In any dispute between civil partners as to title or possession of property, either partner may apply to the court. The court may then make any order in relation to the property as it thinks fit, including an order to sell the property. Contributions by either partner to property improvement are recognised if the contributions are substantial and in money or money's worth.

Children

When dealing with an application for dissolution, nullity or separation where there is a child in the family, the court must consider if should exercise its powers under the Children Act 1989. Section 72 amends the definition of 'a child of the family' accordingly.

Other amendments were also made to equalize the position of civil partners with spouses. Thus civil partners are able to acquire parental responsibilities as a step-parent under Section 72 of the Act. Civil partners may also apply for residence or contact orders. Further, the right to apply for financial provision for children under schedule 1 of the 1989 act is also extended to civil partners. Adoption provisions have been amended so that civil partners are treated in the same way as married couples.

Other provisions

Other areas of the law will also be amended by the Act in order to equalize the position of civil partners. Such areas include certain parts of the law relating to housing and tenancies and the Fatal Accidents Act 1976. Certain parts of the Family Law Act 1996 have also been amended.

Name changing

There is no requirement that either party must change their surname upon entering a civil partnership. However, many couples wish to follow the traditions of a civil marriage and seek to change their surname to that of either partner, or combine their names to make a double-barrelled surname. This change can be made after the civil partnership is registered, and government offices will accept a certificate of civil partnership as evidence of change of name, when applying for a passport or a driving licence, for example. In Scotland, names need not be changed to be considered valid (deeds poll do not exist under Scots law), though some English-based companies may still ask for proof from an official such as a Justice of the Peace. Civil partners of male peers or knights do not receive a courtesy title to which a peer's or knight's wife would be entitled.

Ending the partnership

Section 37(1) of the Act provides for the making of dissolution, nullity, separation and presumption of death orders. These provisions broadly mirror those governing marriage.

Dissolution

No applications for dissolution may be made within one year of the formation of the civil partnership, except in Scotland. Like marriage, irretrievable breakdown is the only ground on which a court may make a dissolution order. Also, Section 44 provides that the court may not make a dissolution order unless the applicant satisfies the court as to certain facts. These facts are similar to those under the MCA. If the applicant satisfies the court as to any of the facts, the court must make a dissolution order unless satisfied on all the evidence that the partnership has not broken down irretrievably. The MCA section 5 defence is also available here. While infidelity is by itself insufficient for dissolving a civil partnership, it may be a contributing factor for dissolution in a court of law under the provision for unreasonable behaviour. This mirrors the situation with divorce law for marriages where homosexual infidelity only constitutes unreasonable behaviour.

Nullity, separation and presumption of death orders

A nullity order is an order which annuls a void or voidable civil partnership. Section 49 of the Act provides that a civil partnership is void on grounds of ineligibility to register, if the parties disregarded certain requirements as to the formation of the partnership, or in the case where any party is a child, if the person whose consent is required has forbidden the formation of the partnership and the court has not given its consent. Where a civil partnership is voidable, applications for nullity orders are subject to the bars of time, knowledge of defect and approbation.

A presumption of death order dissolves the partnership on the grounds that one of the partners is presumed to be dead, while a separation order provides for the separation of the parties. These orders are governed by Sections 55 and 56 of the Act and they largely mirror the position for married couples.

The first civil partnerships

The first civil partnership formed under the Civil Partnership Act 2004 took place at 11:00 GMT 5 December 2005 between Matthew Roche and Christopher Cramp at St Barnabas Hospice, Worthing, West Sussex. The usual 15 day waiting period was waived as Roche was suffering from a terminal illness: he died the next day.[2] The first partnership registered after the usual waiting period was held in Belfast on 19 December 2005 between Grainne Close and Shannon Sickles.

The first partnerships formed in Great Britain (after the normal waiting period) should have occurred on 21 December, but due to a misinterpretation of the waiting period, the first in Scotland were held on 20 December. The first civil partnerships in England and Wales were formed on 21 December 2005, with Westminster, Hampshire, Hammersmith and Fulham and Brighton & Hove conducting the largest numbers.[3]

According to the Office for National Statistics, 18,059 couples entered into a civil partnership between December 2005 and the end of December 2006.[4]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ "Gay couples to get joint rights". BBC News. 2004-03-31. Retrieved 2006-05-14. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ "'Gay wedding' man dies of cancer". BBC News. 2005-12-06. Retrieved 2006-05-14. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  3. ^ "Nearly 700 same-sex couples to 'tie the knot' on December 21". Jon Land. 2005-12-16. Retrieved 2006-05-14. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  4. ^ "Civil Partnerships: Over 18,000 formed by December 2006". Office for National Statistics. 2007-06-28. Retrieved 2007-09-08. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)

References

  • Rayson, Jane (2005). The Civil Partnership Act 2004: A Practical Guide. Cambridge University Press. pp. 354 pages. ISBN 0521617928. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)

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