Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Table of cases
- Table of statutes
- 1 Introduction to the Act
- 2 What is a civil partnership? Formation by registration in England and Wales: eligibility
- 3 Pre-registration procedure: standard procedure; house-bound and detained partners; certain non-residents and other special cases
- 4 Registration in England and Wales – the standard procedure; the special procedure
- 5 Registration outside the UK by Order in Council
- 6 Overseas relationships treated as civil partnerships
- 7 Financial and property implications of civil partnership
- 8 Children
- 9 Relationship between the Civil Partnership Act and the Gender Recognition Act
- 10 The ending of the partnership: orders for dissolution
- 11 Nullity and other proceedings
- 12 Offences
- 13 Domestic violence and occupation of the home
- 14 Financial consequences on breakdown
- 15 Financial relief in England and Wales after an overseas dissolution
- 16 Miscellaneous
- Appendix Civil Partnership Act 2004 – extracts
- Index
3 - Pre-registration procedure: standard procedure; house-bound and detained partners; certain non-residents and other special cases
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Table of cases
- Table of statutes
- 1 Introduction to the Act
- 2 What is a civil partnership? Formation by registration in England and Wales: eligibility
- 3 Pre-registration procedure: standard procedure; house-bound and detained partners; certain non-residents and other special cases
- 4 Registration in England and Wales – the standard procedure; the special procedure
- 5 Registration outside the UK by Order in Council
- 6 Overseas relationships treated as civil partnerships
- 7 Financial and property implications of civil partnership
- 8 Children
- 9 Relationship between the Civil Partnership Act and the Gender Recognition Act
- 10 The ending of the partnership: orders for dissolution
- 11 Nullity and other proceedings
- 12 Offences
- 13 Domestic violence and occupation of the home
- 14 Financial consequences on breakdown
- 15 Financial relief in England and Wales after an overseas dissolution
- 16 Miscellaneous
- Appendix Civil Partnership Act 2004 – extracts
- Index
Summary
Introduction
The pre-registration procedure followed by prospective civil partners will depend on their particular circumstances. Most will follow what the Act describes as the standard procedure, but the Act also caters for persons who are house-bound, for detained persons and there is also a special procedure for cases where one or both of the prospective civil partners is seriously ill and not expected to recover. Moreover, all the procedures (except for the special procedure) are subject to modification where one of the partners is a non-resident (see 3.5 for who is regarded as a non-resident) or is a former spouse who has changed sex. The procedure will also be different in those cases where there are issues of prohibited degrees of relationship and where one of the proposed civil partners is under eighteen. Finally, there are special procedural considerations in the case of a prospective civil partner who is subject to immigration control.
Standard pre-registration procedure
Giving notice
Each of the would-be civil partners must give notice of the proposed civil partnership to a registration authority and must also have resided in England and Wales for at least seven days immediately before giving the notice (s.8(1)).
Registration authority In relation to England ‘registration authority’ means a county council, the council of any district comprised in an area for which there is no county council, a London borough council, the Common Council of the City of London or the Council of the Isles of Scilly (s.28(a)) and in relation to Wales, a county council or county borough council (s.28(b)).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Civil Partnership Act 2004A Practical Guide, pp. 9 - 22Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005