I recently found papers where my mother changed her name a couple years after my father passed away. She used a fake name and date of birth till after he passed, He never knew, Was their marriage legal? It was in PA.
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I recently found papers where my mother changed her name a couple years after my father passed away. She used a fake name and date of birth till after he passed, He never knew, Was their marriage legal? It was in PA.
Yes, they were legally married.
One can use any name she wants, unless she uses a false name in order to defraud someone.
And, in any case, while the marriage might have been voidable, it was not void. In other words, if someone, such as your father, figured he had been defrauded, he could have gone to court to declare the marriage void, he didn't, and so it isn't.
Some women or men, lie when they first meet, and find it hard to tell the truth. I will assume this was many years ago, before, they had to provide legal documents to marry.
The marriage is legal, remains legal, unless someone with standing ( legal right) would try to challenge it and void it.
So yes, they were legally married
What about it? It might affect the validity of the marriage license, but the marriage ceremony was performed, correct? If so, it was a marriage. In many places a minister or official performing a marriage can get into legal trouble if he or she performs a ceremony without a license, but that wouldn't void the ceremony itself.
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