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Wedlock

Law Ways and meansWeight of evidence

Wedlock definition:
Being married.
Related Terms: Marriage
Has the same meaning as marriage or matrimony.

 


Wedlock
Being married. Has the same meaning as "matrimony." Used mostly to refer to illegitimate children as "born out of wedlock." ...

out of wedlock (born out of wedlock) A child born of parents who were not legally married to each other at that time.

Born out of wedlock - Born of parents who were not married at the time of birth.

person born out of wedlock whose legal status is illegitimacy. In civil law countries and in about half the states of the United States, the union of the parents in marriage after birth makes the child legitimate.

"Paternity suits" are launched when a man denies paternity of a child born out of wedlock. New technology of DNA testing can establish paternity thus obliging the father to provide child support.

paternity suit - A court action to determine whether a person is the father of a child born out of wedlock for the purpose, commonly, of enforcing support obligations.

not in wedlock) or who are not married at the time of the child's birth. Bench A judge in court session. Beneficiary In a legal context, a "beneficiary" usually refers to the person for whom a trust has been created.

Child - Generally, an unmarried person under 21 years of age who is: a child born in wedlock; a stepchild, provided that the child was under 18 years of age at the time that the marriage creating the stepchild relationship occurred; ...

A man who has a wife; a man legally bound in wedlock to a wife. "Husband and wife" describes persons connected by the marriage tie, and the relation signifies those mutual rights and obligations which flow from the marriage contract. 5 Barb.

Children born in lawful wedlock, or within a competent time afterwards, are presumed to be the issue of the father, and follow his condition; thoseborn out of lawful wedlock, follow the condition of the mother.

A woodcut of a medieval wedlock ceremony from Germany.
From the early Christian era (30 to 325 CE), marriage was thought of as primarily a private matter,[citation needed] with no uniform religious or other ceremony being required.

For many years, therefore, in Europe and in former European colonies, women could not transmit their nationality to their children born in wedlock (those children born outside of marriage could often acquire their mother's nationality as there were ...

paternity suit - An action brought to determine the identity of the father of a child born out of wedlock, and to provide for the support of the child once the identity of the father has been determined.

PATERNITY
Being a father. "Paternity suits" are launched when a man denies paternity of a child born out of wedlock. New technology of DNA testing can establish paternity thus obliging the father to provide child support.

ILLEGITIMATE
That which is contrary to law; it is usually applied to children born out of lawful wedlock. A bastard is sometimes called an illegitimate child.... more ...

Bastard
An illegitimate child, born in a relationship between two persons that are not married (ie. not in wedlock) or who are not married at the time of the child's birth.
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Formerly, statutes governing wills used this phrase to specify children born to married parents, and to exclude those born out of wedlock. Now, the phrase means the same as issue and "lineal descendant."
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BASTARDY - Persons. The state or condition of a bastard. The law presumes every child legitimate, when born of a woman in a state of wedlock, and casts the onus probandi on the party who affirms the bastardy.
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See also: Will, Were, Lawyer, Word, Witness

Law Ways and meansWeight of evidence

 
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