The plaintiff, Joan S., appeals from an order of the Hillsborough County Superior Court dismissing her petition requesting the court to impose alimony, child support, and other obligations on the defendant, John S. The petition alleged the following facts. The plaintiff and the defendant lived together without benefit of marriage continuously from 1963 or 1964 until the filing of the petition in June 1979. The parties have four children, ranging in age from ten to fourteen. Both the plaintiff, who is unemployed, and the children are totally dependent for their support upon the defendant. The defendant operates his own business with an estimated equity of $80,000. The parties’ homestead is in their joint names, as are certain bank accounts. The parties also own certain household furnishings and personal property. Their automobiles are owned separately.
The petition requested the court to decree the relationship of the parties a void marriage and “impose the obligations and restrictions upon the defendant pursuant to the statutory laws of the State . . . with regards to alimony, child support, property division and injunctions ... as may be just and equitable. . . .” In the alternative, the plaintiff requested that the defendant be enjoined from entering the homestead, pursuant to RSA 498:2. The plaintiff further requested that the defendant be ordered to pay support for *98 both herself and the children pursuant to RSA ch. 168-A and for herself on the basis of assumpsit and quantum meruit. Finally, the plaintiff requested that the parties’ property be divided between them pursuant to RSA ch. 538.
In answer to the petition, John S. alleged that he supports, and will continue to support, his minor children and that he acknowledges the interest of Joan S. in the jointly owned real estate and any joint bank accounts. The defendant alleged, however, that his business is owned by him alone and was so owned before he had any acquaintance with Joan S. He also alleged that Joan S. was always aware that he never intended to marry her. The Trial Court {Bean, J.) granted the defendant’s motion to dismiss the petition.
The question presented to this court is whether the petition of Joan S. alleges grounds for relief. We hold that it does not and affirm the dismissal of the petition.
The primary contention of Joan S. is that the relationship between the parties should be considered a marriage. She seeks to dissolve this “marriage” under RSA ch. 458. The brief description of the nature of the case in the notice of appeal states: “[T]his case involves a determination of the rights and liabilities of the parties to a common law marriage.” The specific question to be raised on appeal is the “[rjights and liabilities of the parties to a common law marriage.” A secondary request of Joan S. is to have this court apply New Hampshire law concerning the disposition of marital property in a divorce proceeding to the disposition of property of parties who have cohabited and raised a family but have never married.
“New Hampshire is a ‘jurisdiction which does not recognize the validity of common-law marriages’ . . . except to the limited extent provided by [RSA 457:39].”
Fowler v. Fowler,
The plaintiff asks us, however, to follow the reasoning of
In re Marriage of Cary,
Our refusal to apply RSA ch. 458 to the dissolution of non-marital living arrangements does not, however, prevent equitable adjustment of the rights of the parties.
See id.
at 819,
With respect to the plaintiffs request that the real estate be partitioned, we conclude that the petition was properly dismissed for the plaintiffs failure to state her interest and to name all the interested parties as required by RSA 538:2. Likewise, the plaintiffs request for relief under RSA ch. 168-A was properly *100 denied for her failure to comply with the statute of limitations. RSA 168-A:12 (Supp. 1979).
In the appeal before us, we are not concerned with the broad social ramifications of the property rights of de facto spouses in what are commonly referred to as unstructured domestic arrangements. The case before us arises solely from the plaintiffs pleadings, all of the prayers of which were properly dismissed by the trial court upon motions of the defendant. While there may be viable theories for legal and equitable relief available to Joan S., they were not presented to the trial court.
We affirm the dismissal of the petition by the trial court with the understanding that our decision does not bar the commencement of an appropriate proceeding for legal and equitable relief, provided it is commenced within sixty days from the date of this decision. Otherwise, any further proceeding is barred.
Affirmed.
