In re Validation of Marriage of Francisco

6 Navajo Rptr. 134
CourtNavajo Nation Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 2, 1989
DocketNo. A-CV-15-88
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Navajo Rptr. 134 (In re Validation of Marriage of Francisco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Navajo Nation Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Validation of Marriage of Francisco, 6 Navajo Rptr. 134 (navajo 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion delivered by

BLUEHOUSE, Associate Justice.

I

This is a marriage validation case in which the Appellant, Loretta Francisco, appealed the July 20, 1988 decision of the Window Rock District Court denying validation of her common-law marriage.

Oliver Chaca and Loretta Francisco cohabitated as man and wife between approximately October 1978 and August 7, 1987 in Window Rock, Arizona. Chaca worked in Peach Springs, Arizona. Francisco, an enrolled member of the Navajo Tribe, and Chaca, a Hopi, combined their earnings, acquired personal property in both of their names, and accumulated debts in both of their names. The public knew of the parties’ relationship. Chaca often introduced himself and Francisco as husband and wife, and visited Francisco at her place of employment. No children were born to the couple. Sometime in June 1987, they talked about marrying each other, but they did not obtain a marriage license, marry according to Arizona state law, or participate in a traditional Navajo wedding ceremony.

On August 7, 1987, Chaca died as the result of an automobile accident. Among the property for distribution among Chaca's heirs is the proceeds from the decedent's Federal Employees’ Group Life Insurance policy. Francisco cannot collect any portion of the life insurance proceeds unless her common-law marriage is validated.

The Window Rock District Court applied 9 N.T.C. § 2 to the parties’ relationship and ruled that the statute means that Navajos can validly contract marriage with non-Navajos only in compliance with applicable state or foreign law. Validating the Marriage of Garcia, 5 Nav. R. 30, 31 (1985). The district court [135]*135found that although the parties’ relationship met the three elements of a common-law marriage, as set forth in In re Marriage of Ketchum, 2 Nav. R. 102 (1979), Arizona did not recognize common-law marriages. In re Estate of Trigg, 3 Ariz. App. 385, 387; 414 P.2d 988, 990 (1966). The district court refused to validate the parties’ marriage because they failed to contract it according to Arizona law.

II

The subject of marriage within the Navajo Nation is perplexing because of the outdated and confusing laws found in Title 9 of the Navajo Tribal Code. Consequently, the Navajo courts are faced with the difficult task of reconciling the Navajo Tribal Council's intent with the parties’ expectations in recovering veterans’ and other benefits. See, e.g., In re Marriage of Daw, 1 Nav. R. 1 (1969). The lack of a coherent Navajo domestic relations code has caused Navajo courts to mingle common-law marriage with traditional Navajo marriage. See, e.g., id. However, these two kinds of marriages differ substantially. A common-law marriage is “not solemnized in the ordinary way (i.e. non-ceremonial) but created by an agreement to marry followed by cohabitation.... Such marriage requires a positive mutual agreement, permanent and exclusive of all others, to enter into a marriage relationship, cohabitation sufficient to warrant a fulfillment of necessary relationship of man and wife, and an assumption of marital duties and obligations.... Such marriages are invalid in many states.” Black's Law Dictionary 251 (5th ed. 1979). This type of marriage is a product of Anglo practice that is unknown and unrecognized in traditional Navajo society.

By contrast, contracting a traditional Navajo marriage has been described as follows:

1) The parties to the proposed marriage shall have met and agreed to marry.
2) The parents of the man shall ask the parents of the women for her hand in marriage.
3) The bride and bridegroom then eat commeal mush out of the sacred basket.
4) Those assembled in the hogan then give advice for a happy marriage to the bride and groom.
5) Gifts may or may not be exchanged.

Navajo Tribal Council Resolution CJ-2-40 (June 3, 1940).

“Traditional Navajo society places great importance upon the institution of marriage. A traditional Navajo marriage, when consummated according to a prescribed elaborate ritual, is believed to be blessed by the ‘Holy People.’ This blessing ensures that the marriage will be stable, in harmony, and perpetual.” Navajo Nation v. Murphy, 6 Nav. R. 10, 13 (1988). Under traditional Navajo thought, unmarried couples who live together act immorally because they are said to steal each other. Thus, in traditional Navajo society the Navajo people did not approve of or recognize common-law marriages.

In 1940, the Navajo Tribal Council observed that “while the majority of the [136]*136Navajos who have the advantage of an educdtion prefer church and state marriages, the overwhelming majority of those who have not been to school are married by tribal custom.” Navajo Tribal Council Resolution CJ-2-40 (June 3,1940). Prior to the date of this resolution, and even several years after, Navajos, almost all of whom lived completely within an oral culture, had no use for marriage licenses. Yet today, most Navajos conduct affairs — such as obtaining federal government benefits, credit, and education — involving Anglo institutions that often demand written proof of marriage.

After partaking in the traditional Navajo wedding ceremony, some couples do not obtain marriage licenses because, traditionally, the performance of the ceremony completely validates the union. Unfortunately, Navajos without marriage licenses often face problems, such as difficulty in acquiring Social Security and military benefits for their dependents. See, e.g., Daw, 1 Nav. R. at 1.

In 1954, the Navajo Tribal Council attempted to remedy this problem by allowing Navajo courts to validate Navajo custom marriages contracted on or before January 31, 1954. Navajo Tribal Council Resolution CF-2-54 (Feb. 11, 1954) (codified at 9 N.T.C. § 61, amended by Navajo Tribal Council Resolution CAP-36-80 (April 30, 1980)). The Tribal Council planned to begin “enlightening the Navajo people on the basic requirements for a valid legal marriage,” probably with the hope that those marrying after January 31, 1954 would realize that they should obtain marriage licenses. Id. Yet even after 1954, many Navajos, adhering to the traditional belief that the performance of the traditional Navajo wedding ceremony fully validates the union, still did not obtain marriage licenses.

In 1969, the Court validated an unlicensed Navajo tribal custom marriage that occurred after 1954, observing that “[mjarriages in which the partners were recognized as being married prior to February 1, 1954 are clearly validated, but the Tribal Council did not outlaw specifically, common-law marriages after that date.” Daw, 1 Nav. R. at 3. The marriage the Court in Daw validated was contracted by a traditional Navajo wedding ceremony, but lacked a license. A traditional Navajo marriage is not a common-law marriage, and unfortunately the Court in Daw mingled the two. See Black's Law Dictionary 251 (5th ed. 1979). The Court apparently transformed the traditional Navajo marriage into a common-law marriage to circumvent the January 31, 1954 cut-off date so that the widowed spouse could receive veteran's benefits. The Court in Daw

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Related

United States v. Kagama
118 U.S. 375 (Supreme Court, 1886)
Williams v. Lee
358 U.S. 217 (Supreme Court, 1959)
Hisquierdo v. Hisquierdo
439 U.S. 572 (Supreme Court, 1979)
Ridgway v. Ridgway
454 U.S. 46 (Supreme Court, 1981)
In Re Estate of Trigg
414 P.2d 988 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
6 Navajo Rptr. 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-validation-of-marriage-of-francisco-navajo-1989.