How To Do Court Marriage In Nigeria: Steps And Requirements (2024)

Court Marriage, also known as Legal Marriage, is the legalization of a marriage between two persons who have agreed to live together as Husband and Wife. A Court Marriage is also defined as a marriage performed in the Court Registry.

A Court Marriage is a frequent type of marriage in Nigeria, and it is governed by the Marriage Act 1914, the law that governs the procedure for conducting a marriage in Nigeria. A Court Marriage is desired by all because, once the conditions and processes of a Court Marriage are met, such a person can be said to be legally married, with no encumbrance or issue that may emerge in the future regarding the Validity of such Marriage.

IMPORTANCE OF COURT MARRIAGE

The following are the significance and advantages of having a Court Marriage:

  1. SPEED OF MARRIAGE

One of the advantages of court marriage is that it is completed quickly. A Court Marriage ceremony is usually brief. It could take only 30 minutes or up to 1 hour and 30 minutes. This is extremely hurried in comparison to traditional marriage or other types of marriage in Nigeria, which normally take a long time to celebrate.

  1. LEGAL SECURITY OF PARTNERS

Court Marriage in Nigeria provides the partners in the marriage with the necessary legal security. Court Marriage safeguards you from the crime of bigamy (which is a criminal offense in which either of the partners marries another man or woman during the subsistence of their Marriage). Before entering into a Court Marriage, you must obtain certification that you are not already married. This condition thereby safeguards Court Marriage Parties from committing the crime of Bigamy.

  1. STRESS-FREE

In Nigeria, court marriage is the least demanding type of marriage. In a Court Marriage, you do not need to devote as much time and effort to wedding planning. A Court Marriage also has a limited number of guests, as opposed to a Traditional Marriage, which can fit a whole village; even those who do not know you will come to rejoice with you on your wedding day. As a result, you must arrange to accommodate a large number of guests, which is stressful.

  1. COST-EFFECTIVE

Court Marriage saves money because it is the least expensive type of marriage in Nigeria. The registration and payment of the necessary forms for the marriage do not exceed ₦30,000. Furthermore, unlike other types of marriage, you do not need to spend money on planning the Court Marriage, which requires you to obtain a place, decorate the venue, hire a music band, and purchase other equipment and materials for the Marriage ceremony.

  1. FLEXIBLE DRESS CODE

Another well-known benefit of a Court Marriage is the flexibility in the clothing code. This means that there is no set dress code for a Court Marriage. As a result, you can wear whatever you like or what pleases you, which will save you the stress of wearing something you don’t like because it’s the dress code or the cost of borrowing, hiring, or purchasing a new dress, especially for the wedding.

STEP-BY-STEP GUIDE TO COURT WEDDING IN NIGERIA (2024)

The following is a step-by-step guide to legally marrying in Nigeria:

  1. NOTICE OF MARRIAGE

To begin, parties who desire to marry as husband and wife must give a Notice of Intention to a Registry of their choice.

A Registry is a government body that oversees all marriages to be performed in Nigeria, solemnizes all marriages, and maintains a record of all marriages contracted in Nigeria.

There are two types of marriage registries in Nigeria: the Federal Marriage Registry, which is only found in Abuja and Lagos State, and the Local Government Marriage Registry, which is found in each Local Council in each state. This Registry is overseen by the Principal Registrar of Marriage or while acting as a Registrar, the Deputy Registrar.

Thus, if you want to marry in Nigeria, you can go to any Registry of your choice and have a form of notice of your planned marriage issued to you by the Registrar of the Registry where your marriage is to take place.

When you acquire this form from the Registrar, you must fill it out correctly, sign it, and send it to the Registrar along with two colored passport photographs.

According to Section 8 of the Marriage Act, the Registrar shall enter your Notice of Marriage into the Marriage Notice Book, and the Registrar shall cause this Notice of Marriage to be published by affixing a copy of the Notice to the outer door of the Registrar’s Office, and exposing it there until the period of three months elapses or until the Registrar grants his certificate.

  1. CERTIFICATE OF THE REGISTRAR

When your Notice of Marriage expires, you must pay the Registry of Marriage’s stipulated fee. After paying the necessary price, you must submit an affidavit stating that:

  • You are a resident of the district in which the marriage is to be held.
  • Each of the parties is of legal drinking age, and the requisite consent has been received.
  • The Marriage is not hampered by kinship, kindred, or any other legal barrier.

By Customary Law, neither of the parties to the intended Marriage is Married to anybody other than the person with whom such marriage is supposed to be contracted.

These conditions must be included in and satisfied by, an affidavit made before the Registrar, an Administrative Officer, or a registered minister of religion. The penalty for lying on oath or breaching any of the regulations will be explained to you during the course of swearing this Affidavit.

The Registrar will sign and issue you a Certificate if you have met these criteria

  1. LICENSE OF THE MINISTER

Once the aforementioned steps have been completed, the Minister, upon receiving proof that there is no legal impediment to your proposed marriage and that the necessary consent to the marriage has been obtained, shall forego the giving of notice and issuance of the Registrar’s Certificate, and grant his License known as Form.

This Minister’s License enables the Marriage Celebration between the parties mentioned in the license. As a result, once you obtain the Minister’s License, you will be able to marry in Nigeria.

  1. CAVEAT

A caveat is a warning that forbids someone from committing an act. Caveat refers to the opposition to an intended marriage in this context. This is done by any person who has or knows of any Just Cause why he or she believes the intended Marriage should not take place, by filing a Caveat against the issue of the Registrar’s certificate, as provided for in Section 14 of the Marriage Act 1914.

When a Caveat is filed against the issuing of a Certificate, the Registrar refers the matter to a Judge of the State High Court, who summons the parties to the intended marriage and the person who filed the Caveat to appear in Court. The Judge will order the individual who filed the Caveat to provide justification for why the Registrar should not issue his Certificate.

If no just cause is presented, or if the Judge decides that the Certificate should be issued, he must remove the Caveat by replacing the phrase “Forbidden” in the Marriage Notice with the words “Canceled by decision of the High Court,” and signing his name. The Registrar will then issue his certificate, and the Marriage will proceed as if the Caveat had not been recorded.

  1. LEGAL AUTHORIZATION

When the legal authority is granted by the Registrar, Minister, and the High Court in the case of a Caveat, the parties to the intended marriage must select a wedding date that is within three months of the date the notification was filed with the Registry.

  1. CELEBRATION OF MARRIAGE

According to Section 21 of the Marriage Act, the parties to the intended marriage should celebrate the marriage in any licensed place of Worship by any recognized minister of the church in accordance with the Church’s rituals of Marriage.

During the celebration, the Principal Registrar shall have the Certificate of Marriage printed and presented to the various Registrars as well as the authorized Minister of the licensed place of Worship.

The officiating Minister, the parties to the marriage, and two or more witnesses to the marriage must then sign this Certificate in duplicate.

The Minister must additionally sign his name to the counterfeit and cut the duplicate Certificate from it. As a result, the Minister shall provide one certificate to the Parties and, within seven days, convey the second certificate to the Registrar, who shall file it in his office.

  1. REGISTRATION OF THE MARRIAGE CERTIFICATE

This is the last bus stop in Nigeria to practice court marriage. The Registrar will require that the marriage certificate is submitted in the wedding list book, which contains each wedding certificate, with the inclusion of a marriage certificate in this list book made in the order where marriages are contracted and the marriage certificate is signed.

CONCLUSION

That’s it. Court Marriage is simple and straightforward. All you just need to do is to follow the steps explained in this article, and you’re good to go.

Mfonobong Daniel

Daniel is an Editor on Nigerian Infopedia who craves for writing, researching and also watching soccer.

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