By their excellent briefs and oral arguments the parties have presented to the court a question, not heretofore directly answered by an appellate court of this state, concerning the validity of a commоn-law marriage. Charles W. Hesington died March 8, 1980, a resident of Greene County, Missouri. On June 4, 1980, Letters of Administration With Will Annexed were issued upon his estate by the Probate Division of the Circuit Court of Greene County, Missouri. In this proceeding the appеllant seeks to establish that she is the widow of the decedent by virtue of a common-law marriage contracted in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on April 8, 1978. The Probate Division of the Circuit Court denied that relief.
It is not necessary to set forth in detail the evidence in support of and in derogation of that asserted common-law marriage. In view of the findings of the trial court, it is sufficient to review the evidence favorable to that claim. The favorable evidencе is summarized as follows. The appellant and the decedent were before, at the time of, and after the asserted common-law marriage domiciled in and actually resided in Greene County, Missouri. The appellant аnd the decedent each had an interest in attending dog shows. Before April 8, 1978, they began dating. They attended numerous dog shows together. On April 8, 1978, they made a business trip to Tulsa, Oklahoma, to see one Donna Wainwright. They related to hеr that during the trip, without witnesses or solemnization, they exchanged marriage vows. The following week they attended a dog show in Tulsa in a mobile home. They repeated their marriage vows to a friend staying in the next mobile home. They told the friend that they had been married the preceding weekend. Thereafter, the trial court found they “were known to cohabitate [sic], refer to each other as husband and wife, and otherwise publicly hold themselves out as such”.
From these findings the trial court concluded the appellant and the decedent “spoke words and acted in such a manner *825 that had they been residents of the State of Oklahoma on April 8,1978, they would have met the requirеments of a common-law marriage”. However, the trial court then reviewed the statutes and the case law of this state and concluded that Missouri will not recognize a common-law marriage consummated in a commоn-law state, “while its residents only temporarily leave the state to attempt such marriage and immediately return”. The trial court entered its judgment that the alleged marriage was null and void and of no force nor effect.
Seсtion 451.040.5, RSMo 1978, provides: “Common-law marriages hereafter contracted shall be null and void”. This provision was adopted in 1921. Laws of Missouri 1921, page 468. It has been consistently held that a common-law marriage contracted in Missouri after that date is null and void.
State v. Eden,
43 Okla.St.Anno. § 4 provides that no person shall contract a marriage in Oklahoma without a license being first issued. Subsequent sections contain provisions concerning the issuance of a license, its contents and endorsement and return. 43 Okla.St.Anno. § 7 provides: “[a]ll marriages must be contracted by a formal ceremony” as prescribed in that section. Nevertheless, common-law marriages contracted in Oklahoma are rеcognized by the courts of that state.
Daniels v. Mohon,
(1)an actual and mutual agreement between the spouses to be husband and wife;
(2) a permanent relationship;
(3) an exclusive relationship;
(4) cohabitation as man and wife;
(5) the parties to thе marriage must hold themselves out publicly as husband and wife. Estate of Phifer,629 P.2d 808 , 809 (Okl.App.1981). 3 (Footnotes Omitted).
This case presents a narrow conflict of laws question. The issue presented is circumscribed by the following facts. As stated, the appellant and the decedent were before, at the time of, and after the asserted common-law marriage domiciled in and actually resided in the state of Missouri. The asserted common-law marriage was without witnesses and was not based upon any formal сeremony. The parties made no effort to comply with the Oklahoma statutes providing for the issuance of a marriage license and the formalities of a marriage. The asserted marriage was what may be termed а strictly common-law marriage.
It has often been said by the courts of this state that the validity of a marriage is to be determined by the law of the state where it was contracted.
Hartman v. Valien & Spies Milling Co.,
*826 A state is fully sovereign with respect to the control and regulation of marriages for the purpose of promoting public morality and the moral and physical development of the parties, and every state has the power to determine not only who shall assume, but also who shall occupy, the matrimonial relationship within its borders. 52 Am.Jur.2d Marriage § 79, page 929. (Footnotes Omitted).
Also see
In re Duncan’s Death,
The issue is whether or not it is against the public policy of this state to recognize a marriage of parties, domiciled in and actu- - ally rеsiding in Missouri, contracted in a strictly common-law manner, while on a temporary sojourn in Oklahoma. Similar issues have been decided by many other states. In expressing the majority view in applying New Jersey Law, the U.S. Court of Appeals, 3rd Circuit, said:
But where the parties, while retaining their domicile in one state, pay a temporary visit to another state and there enter into a marriage which would not be recognized by the law of the state of their domicilе if entered into therein, the latter state does not always look to the law of the place of the marriage to determine its validity. On the contrary, when the state of their domicile has a strong public policy against thе type of marriage which the parties have gone to another state to contract, which policy is evidenced by a statute declaring such marriages to be void, the former state as the one most interested in the status and welfare of the parties will ordinarily look to its own law to determine the validity of the alleged marriage. Metropolitan Life Insurance Company v. Chase,294 F.2d 500 , 503-504 (3rd Cir.1961).
For cases involving factual situations similar to this case in which the validity of a common-law marriage was deniеd see
Grant v. Superior Ct., in and for County of Pima,
The public policy of this state in regard to the recognition of the strictly common-law marriage in question has not been declared by the Supreme Court. Nor has the issue been dealt with decisively by the Court of Appeals. In
Hodge
v.
Conley,
“Both statutes and judicial decisions have a bearing in ascertaining the public policy of a state, but statutes are the very
highest evidence of public policy
and binding on the courts”.
Brawner
v.
Brawner,
Notes
. The issue in this case is to be distinguished from the proof of a ceremonial .marriage by cohabitation and reputation.
In re Estate of Tomlinson,
. Two Oklahoma cases indicate that whether or not a common-law marriage contracted in Oklahoma will be recognized is dependent upon the law of the domicile of the parties.
Lopez v. Bonner,
. It has been held the cohabitation and holding out necessary to establish a common-law marriage must occur in the state that recognizes common-law marriage.
Grant v. Superior Ct., in and for County of Pima,
. The most significant contacts principle has been adopted in regard to the application of a guest statute in a tort action.
Kennedy v. Dixon,
. “Because of this provision making common-law marriage null and void, we hold that Minnesota residents may not enter into a valid common-law marriage by temporarily visiting a state which allows common-law marriages.”
Laikola v. Engineered Concrete, supra,
n. 3,
