[HISTORY: Adopted by the Tribal Council of the Nottawaseppi Huron Band of the Potawatomi 3-16-2023 by Res. No. 03-16-23-08. Amendments noted where applicable.]
The title of this code shall be the "Nottawaseppi Huron Band of the Potawatomi's (NHBP, Tribe, or Band) Marriage Code." It may be referred to as the "Marriage Code" or simply the "Code."
The purpose of this code is to establish procedures for marriage within the Band's jurisdiction and the recognition of marriages performed outside of the Band's jurisdiction.
If any provision of this code is found to be unconstitutional or unlawful by a court of competent jurisdiction, such provision(s) shall be struck, and the remainder of this code shall remain in full force and effect.
As used in this chapter, the following terms shall have the meanings indicated:
INDIAN PERSON
A person who identifies as Native American, as evidenced by a tribally issued identification or by affidavit of self-identification.
MARRIAGE CERTIFICATE
A certified document which proves that a couple is officially married.
MARRIAGE LICENSE
A document issued by the Tribal Court authorizing a couple to marry.
MARRIAGE LICENSE APPLICATION
A form upon which a couple seeking to be married affirm that each is legally qualified to enter into marriage with the other.
OFFICIANT
The person designated to perform a marriage ceremony.
TRIBAL LANDS
Lands owned by the Nottawaseppi Huron Band of the Potawatomi; lands owned by the United States of America in trust for the Nottawaseppi Huron Band of the Potawatomi; lands within the exterior boundaries of the Nottawaseppi Huron Band reservation; and Indian country, as defined in 18 U.S.C. § 1151.
A. 
The Nottawaseppi Huron Band of the Potawatomi shall recognize as valid and binding any marriage between two consenting adults without regard to gender, conducted in compliance with the laws of the jurisdiction in which such marriage was formalized.
B. 
A common law or traditional marriage entered shall not be recognized as a valid marriage unless, at the time the common law marriage is entered into:
(1) 
Each party is 18 years of age or older;
(2) 
The parties cohabitated as spouses on Tribal Land for a period of at least 10 years;
(3) 
At least four Tribal citizens can attest to the parties' spousal relationship; and
(4) 
The marriage is not prohibited, as provided in § 7.7-8.
C. 
Notwithstanding the provisions of this section, a common law marriage contracted outside Tribal Land shall not be recognized as valid in this Tribal jurisdiction.
A. 
No persons shall be married by a Judge of the Tribal Court without a validly issued and effective marriage license.
B. 
The Clerk and any Judge of the Tribal Court are authorized and empowered to issue a marriage license to any couple who desires to join together in marriage, whether or not they are enrolled members of NHBP, so long as at least one party to the marriage is an Indian person.
C. 
A marriage license shall be issued by the Tribal Court within three business days of the filing of a marriage license application, signed by both parties seeking to marry, upon an application form to be prescribed by the Tribal Court and upon the payment of a license fee in an amount which shall be set by administrative order of the Court.
D. 
The marriage license shall remain effective and valid for a period of 33 days after the period of issuance. A marriage license is rendered void if the marriage is not solemnized within this thirty-three-day period.
A. 
All marriage license applications filed with the Tribal Court, and copies of all marriage licenses and marriage certificates issued by the Court shall be indexed by date and the names of the parties and shall be maintained as permanent, public records of the Nottawaseppi Huron Band of the Potawatomi.
B. 
Such records shall be periodically duplicated and a separate, duplicate set shall be transferred to the Government Records Department to be placed for safekeeping in the Records Retention Center.
A. 
The Tribal Court shall issue a marriage license within three days of receipt of a completed marriage license application which affirms that the parties meet the following qualifications:
(1) 
A freely consenting person who is 18 years of age or older may contract marriage. A freely consenting minor who is 16 years of age but is less than 18 years of age may contract marriage with the written consent of one of the minor's parents or the minor's legal guardian.
(2) 
A person contracting marriage is prohibited from marrying the person's parent, sibling, half-sibling, grandparent, child, grandchild, sibling's child, parent's sibling, or cousin of the first degree, except as permitted by established tribal customs and culture.
(3) 
No marriage shall be contracted if either of the parties is currently married or otherwise in a civil union relationship that provides substantially the same rights, benefits, and responsibilities as a marriage.
B. 
As an additional requirement, the Tribal Court shall not issue a marriage license unless at least one of the parties to the proposed marriage is an Indian person.
A. 
Except as to marriages permitted by the established customs of aboriginal cultures, no marriage solemnized pursuant to a marriage license issued by the Tribal Court shall be valid and recognized, unless performed by:
(1) 
Clergyman duly designated by the governing body of one of the parties' faith as having the authority to perform marriages;
(2) 
The NHBP Tribal Council Chairperson;
(3) 
A Tribal Judge of NHBP or of a Court of another federally recognized Tribe, who is authorized by Tribal law to perform marriages; or
(4) 
An Indian medicine man or spiritual leader who is commonly recognized as such by Indian people and who has been approved as such by the Court.
B. 
A marriage performed pursuant to a tribal marriage license by an Officiant authorized to solemnize a marriage as herein provided may be performed at any location within or outside of the reservation.
A. 
For the purpose of this chapter, a traditional Indian marriage shall be defined as one performed by an Indian person, who claims the authority to solemnize marriage between Indian persons in accordance with commonly accepted Indian customs and traditions of any recognized Indian Tribe by virtue of such person's status as a medicine man or Indian spiritual leader.
B. 
It is the express policy of the NHBP to recognize traditional marriages so performed provided that the Officiant is recognized as a medicine man or traditional spiritual leader by a significant number of Indian persons, and provided further, that the Officiant is recognized by order of the Tribal Court as being a medicine man or traditional spiritual Indian leader.
C. 
Such recognition may come about on the Court's own motion or upon the motion of any other person, and such order of recognition shall not be unreasonably withheld. No filing fee shall be required in a proceeding wherein Tribal Court recognition of a medicine man or traditional Indian spiritual leader is sought. Such proceedings may be held on an ex parte basis without notice.
D. 
An order denying such recognition shall be appealable in the same fashion and manner as any other order of the Court.
A. 
After the solemnization of a marriage performed pursuant to a marriage license issued by the Court, two fully executed and conformed copies of the marriage license executed by two witnesses to the ceremony and the Officiant shall be returned to the Clerk of the Tribal Court within 14 days of the ceremony.
B. 
The Clerk of the Court shall endorse upon each such conformed copy its date of receipt and deliver a copy to the Judge of the Court who authorized the issuance of the marriage license, or his successor. The Clerk shall return the remaining copy to the parties of the marriage for their records.
C. 
Upon such delivery, the Judge shall, within three business days, examine the marriage license application and the marriage license to ensure that the information appearing thereon is properly completed and that the marriage was performed in accordance with the provisions of the marriage license.
D. 
Upon a determination that the marriage license application and the marriage license are in proper form, and that there has been compliance with the terms of the marriage license, the Court shall endorse its approval upon the marriage license and shall cause a marriage certificate to be issued by the Court.
E. 
A copy of the marriage certificate shall be maintained in the same file as the related marriage license application and marriage license, while a certified copy of the marriage certificate shall be returned to the parties of the marriage.
F. 
No charge shall be made for the issuance of the marriage certificate or the other activities specified in this section.
A. 
It shall not be the responsibility of the Court to record or file the marriage certificate with any state, county, or Tribal government.
B. 
Should the parties to any marriage performed under the auspices of these provisions desire that a marriage certificate be filed or recorded in another jurisdiction they may obtain such certified copies from the clerk of the Tribal Court as they may desire at the normal and customary charge.
NHBP recognizes common law or traditional marriages. In order to establish a common law or traditional marriage, the couple must show that they intended to be spouses and consented to the marriage; they lived together; and they held themselves out to the community as married for at least ten (10) years. The NHBP Tribal Court may issue a judgment that validates a common law or traditional marriage. In the judgment, the Court will ascertain the date of the marriage's inception. The Court's judgment is sufficient to establish the validity of a common law or traditional marriage.