Bill Text: HI SB46 | 2023 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: Relating To Marriage Of Minors.
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 3-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2023-01-20 - Referred to HHS, JDC. [SB46 Detail]
Download: Hawaii-2023-SB46-Introduced.html
THE SENATE |
S.B. NO. |
46 |
THIRTY-SECOND LEGISLATURE, 2023 |
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STATE OF HAWAII |
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A BILL FOR AN ACT
Relating to Marriage of Minors.
BE IT ENACTED BY THE LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF HAWAII:
SECTION 1. The legislature finds that nationally and internationally there is growing recognition that child marriage is a human rights violation and a severe impediment to social and economic development, resulting in states and countries considering legislation to end the practice of allowing children to marry. The United Nations Children's Fund describes child marriage as any formal marriage or informal union between a child under the age of eighteen and an adult or another child. United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goal 5, relating to gender equality, sets the year 2030 as the target for ending child marriage. The Sustainable Development goals were unanimously adopted in 2015 by all one hundred ninety-three UN member states including the United States.
The concerns about allowing children to marry is that they have not reached the threshold of adulthood that grants certain rights and responsibilities and that a child entering into marriage may have been pressured or coerced into marrying, especially if the child is pregnant, or the marriage may be the result of sex trafficking. According to an analysis conducted by the Public Broadcasting Service's Frontline program, between 2000 and 2014 more than two hundred seven thousand individuals under the age of eighteen married in the United States. While most children were sixteen or seventeen years of age at the time of marriage, some were as young as twelve years old. Girls are disproportionately affected by the practice of child marriage, and the vast majority of these marriages were between a minor female and an adult male.
Hawai‘i's laws regularly define "children" as persons who are less than eighteen years of age; they are often also termed "minors". Nonetheless, the law allows children as young as sixteen years of age to marry. State law further authorizes the family court to approve a marriage of a child who is fifteen years of age. Comparatively, sexual assault laws criminalize sexual conduct with a fifteen-year-old, though an exception is made if the fifteen-year-old is legally married to the sexual partner or the sexual partner is not more than five years older than the minor victim. Based on department of health data, at least eight hundred children were married in Hawai‘i since 2000, with eighty per cent of these marriages being girls marrying adult men.
The legislature further finds that in 2018, Delaware and New Jersey became the first and second states, respectively, to require that both parties to the marriage be at least eighteen years of age at time of marriage. Since then, Pennsylvania, Minnesota, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, and New York, along with American Samoa and the U.S. Virgin Islands, have joined them to end child marriage in their jurisdictions. Similar legislation has been introduced in at least thirteen other states as well as Congress.
The purpose of this Act is to end child marriage in Hawai‘i.
SECTION 2. Section 571-2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended as follows:
1. By amending the definition of "guardianship of a minor" to read:
""Guardianship of a minor"
means the duty and authority to make important decisions in matters having a
permanent effect on the life and development of the minor and to be concerned
about the minor's general welfare. [It]
"Guardianship of a minor" includes[,] but shall not [necessarily]
be limited[, in either number or kind] to:
(1) The
authority to consent [to marriage,] to enlistment in the armed forces of
the United States[,] or to major medical, psychiatric, and surgical
treatment; to represent the minor in legal actions; or to make other
decisions concerning the minor of substantial legal significance;
(2) The authority and duty of reasonable visitation, except to the extent that the right of visitation has been limited by court order;
(3) The rights and responsibilities of legal custody when guardianship is exercised by the natural or adoptive parent, except where legal custody has been vested in another individual, agency, or institution; and
(4) The authority to consent to the adoption of the minor and to make any other decision concerning the minor that the minor's parents could make, when the rights of the minor's parents, or only living parent, have been judicially terminated as provided for in the statutes governing termination of parental rights to facilitate legal adoption, or when both of the minor's legal parents are deceased."
2. By amending the definition of "residual
parental rights and responsibilities" to read:
""Residual parental rights and
responsibilities" means those rights and responsibilities remaining with
the parent after the transfer of legal custody or guardianship of the person,
including[,] but not [necessarily] limited to[,] the right
to reasonable visitation, consent to adoption [or marriage], and the
responsibility for support."
SECTION 3. Section 571-11, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§571-11 Jurisdiction; children. Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, the court shall have exclusive original jurisdiction in proceedings:
(1) Concerning any person who is alleged to have committed an act prior to achieving eighteen years of age that would constitute a violation or attempted violation of any federal, state, or local law or county ordinance. Regardless of where the violation occurred, jurisdiction may be taken by the court of the circuit where the person resides, is living, or is found, or in which the offense is alleged to have occurred;
(2) Concerning any child living or found within the circuit:
(A) Who is neglected as to or deprived of educational services because of the failure of any person or agency to exercise that degree of care for which it is legally responsible;
(B) Who is beyond the control of the child's parent or other custodian or whose behavior is injurious to the child's own or others' welfare;
(C) Who is neither attending school nor receiving educational services required by law whether through the child's own misbehavior or nonattendance or otherwise; or
(D) Who is in violation of curfew;
(3) To determine the custody of any child or appoint a guardian of any child;
(4) For the adoption of a person under chapter 578;
(5) For the termination of parental rights under sections 571-61 through 571-63;
(6) For judicial consent to the [marriage,]
employment[,] or enlistment of a child[,] when consent is
required by law;
(7) For the treatment or commitment of a mentally defective or mentally ill child, or a child with an intellectual disability;
(8) Under the Interstate Compact on Juveniles under chapter 582 or the Interstate Compact for Juveniles under chapter 582D;
(9) For the protection of any child under chapter 587A;
(10) For a change of name as provided in section 574‑5(a)(2)(C); and
(11) Concerning custody or guardianship of an immigrant child pursuant to a motion for special immigrant juvenile factual findings requesting a determination that the child was abused, neglected, or abandoned before the age of eighteen years for purposes of section 101(a)(27)(J) of the federal Immigration and Nationality Act. For the purposes of this paragraph, "child" means an unmarried individual under the age of twenty-one years."
SECTION 4. Section 572-1, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§572-1 Requisites of valid marriage contract. In order to make valid the marriage contract, which shall be permitted between two individuals without regard to gender, it shall be necessary that:
(1) The respective parties do not stand in
relation to each other of ancestor and descendant of any degree whatsoever, two
siblings of the half as well as to the whole blood, [uncle and niece, uncle
and nephew, aunt and nephew, or aunt and niece,] or a person and the
sibling of the person's parent, whether the relationship is the result of
the issue of parents married or not married to each other or parents who are
partners in a civil union or not partners in a civil union;
(2) Each of the parties at the time of
contracting the marriage is at least [sixteen] eighteen years of
age; [provided that with the written approval of the family court of the
circuit within which the minor resides, it shall be lawful for a person under
the age of sixteen years, but in no event under the age of fifteen years, to
marry, subject to section 572-2;]
(3) Neither party has at the time any
lawful [wife, husband,] spouse or civil union partner living, except
as provided in section 572-1.7;
(4) Consent
of neither party to the marriage has been obtained by force, duress, or fraud;
(5) Neither
of the parties is a person afflicted with any loathsome disease concealed from,
and unknown to, the other party;
(6) The
parties to be married in the State shall have duly obtained a license for that
purpose from the agent appointed to grant marriage licenses; and
(7) The marriage ceremony be performed in the State by a person or society with a valid license to solemnize marriages, and the parties to be married and the person performing the marriage ceremony be all physically present at the same place and time for the marriage ceremony."
SECTION 5. Section 572-10, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§572-10 [Applicant apparently
under age.] Age of applicant.
[If] For any applicant for a license to marry [appears
to any agent to be under the age of eighteen years], the agent shall,
before granting a license to marry, require the production of a certificate of
birth or other satisfactory proof showing the age of the applicant."
SECTION 6. Section 580-22, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is amended to read as follows:
"§580-22 Nonage. An action to annul a marriage on the ground
that one of the parties was under legal age, may be brought by the parent or
guardian entitled to the custody of the minor, or by any person admitted by the
court to prosecute as the friend of the minor.
In no case shall the marriage be annulled on the application of a party
who was of legal age at the time it was contracted[; nor when it appears
that the parties, after they attained the legal age, had for any time freely
cohabited as man and wife]."
SECTION 7. Section 572-2, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.
["§572-2 Consent of parent or
guardian. Whenever any person
who is under the age of eighteen is to be married, the written consent of his
or her parents, or guardian or other person in whose care and custody he or she
may be, shall accompany the application for a license to marry. No license shall be issued to any minor who
is under the jurisdiction of the family court without the written consent of a
judge of such court."]
SECTION 8. Section 572-9, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.
["§572-9 Persons under age. Whenever any person who is under the age of
eighteen, whose parents are dead, or who is a ward of a family court, applies
for a license to marry, he or she shall set forth in the statement accompanying
the application, the name of his or her guardian or of any other person in
whose care and custody he or she may be."]
SECTION 9. Section 577-25, Hawaii Revised Statutes, is repealed.
["[§577-25] Emancipation of
certain minors. Any law to
the contrary notwithstanding, a minor who has been married pursuant to chapter
572 shall be deemed to be emancipated and shall be regarded as though he or she
were of legal age and shall have all the rights, duties, privileges, and
responsibilities provided by the civil law to a person who has reached the age
of majority under civil law; provided that:
(1) Nothing
in this section shall be deemed to confer upon such person the right to vote in
any federal, state, or county election or the right to purchase, possess, or
sell alcoholic beverages; and
(2) Nothing
in this section shall change the status of such persons as minors in connection
with any criminal law, nor affect the exclusive original jurisdiction of the
family court over such persons under section 571‑11(1).
For purposes of this section,
"minor" means a person under the age of majority."]
SECTION 10. Statutory material to be repealed is bracketed and stricken. New statutory material is underscored.
SECTION 11. This Act shall take effect upon its approval.
INTRODUCED BY: |
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Report Title:
Marriage; Legal Age
Description:
Raises the minimum age requirement
to enter into marriage from sixteen to eighteen years of age. Removes the parental consent and written
approval by the family court requirements for a minor to marry. Removes spousal cohabitation after the parties
attain legal age as an exception for an annulment based on nonage. Makes conforming amendments.
The summary description
of legislation appearing on this page is for informational purposes only and is
not legislation or evidence of legislative intent.