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Part II - Marriage

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2015

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Summary

What does the Women's Charter require of two persons who want to marry each other?

Two sets of requirements

The Women's Charter makes two sets of requirements for those who wish to marry. One concerns the formalities of marrying, and the other relates to each party's capacity to marry the other.

The requirements of formalities refer to the minimum process the two persons must undergo in order to become married under the law. While the couple will usually also engage in other social functions with their family members and friends as part of their wedding, these additional social functions do not form part of the minimum legal formalities. The requirements relating to capacity to marry refer to the personal characteristics legally required of the couple so they possess full capacity to decide responsibly whether to enter into marriage.

Fulfilling both sets of requirements

It is only when a couple both fulfils the formalities as well as possesses the capacity to marry that the marriage is completely valid under the Women's Charter. Failing to comply with either requirement means a valid marriage will not result. Lawyers say that a valid marriage results only when two persons who possess the capacity to marry each other comply with the legal process of marriage.

Consequences of failure of compliance

Failing to comply with any requirement can lead to one or more of several legal consequences.

A most severe legal consequence follows the failure to comply with the most important of the formalities of marriage or any of the requirements of capacity to marry: the resulting marriage is completely invalid. Lawyers call such an invalid marriage by the somewhat contradictory term of “void marriage”. Despite the contradiction within the term, it is useful in conveying the idea that, in fact, no marriage had ever taken place.

Then the Women's Charter identifies several causes of invalidity which, if they exist, allow the two parties to this “voidable marriage” to choose whether to apply to court to have their marriage annulled, or not to apply to court in which case their marriage continues as if it were a perfectly valid marriage. A voidable marriage may, at the parties’ choice, either be made completely void, or it may continue as a completely valid marriage if they do not act to make it void.

Type
Chapter
Information
The Singapore Women's Charter
50 Questions
, pp. 11 - 24
Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute
Print publication year: 2011

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