Marital Rights in Missouri

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Revision as of 06:25, 4 August 2018 by Davidjenkins (talk | contribs) (Statutory Rights)

Overview

Common Law

Curtesy and Dower have both been abolished in Missouri since 1955. MO Rev Stat § 474.110.

Community Property

N/A.

Homestead

[still researching]

Statutory Rights

Missouri recognizes statutory marital interests in real property for non-titled spouses. These are referred to in the statutes as Marital Rights and in most cases require the joinder or waiver of marital rights of a non-titled spouse in any conveyance. MO Rev Stat § 474.150 (2017).

  • A Non-Title Holding Spouse must execute any deed of conveyance or deed of trust. There is no civil union in Missouri.
  • Non-Title holding spouse may waive spousal rights and thereafter not sign deed, mortgage or deed of trust.

A married individual can hold property in his/her name individually. However, a conveyance without the spouse's signature is presumed to be in fraud of marital rights. The marital right involved is a right of inheritance and can only be asserted by a surviving spouse. As a result, the Company requires that the deed conveying property held in the name of one spouse must also have the other spouse's signature in order to be insurable.

Joinder Language

Cross-References