       THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
           In The Court of Appeals

Cathy J. Swicegood, Appellant,

v.

Polly A. Thompson, Respondent.

State Ex Rel Alan Wilson, Attorney General, Intervenor.

Appellate Case No. 2018-000008



           Appeal From Greenville County
       W. Marsh Robertson, Family Court Judge


                 Opinion No. 5735
     Heard September 18, 2019 – Filed July 1, 2020


                     AFFIRMED


John G. Reckenbeil, of Law Office of John G.
Reckenbeil, L.L.C., of Mauldin, and J. Falkner Wilkes,
of Greenville, for Appellant.

Margaret A. Chamberlain, of Chamberlain Law Firm,
LLC, of Greenville, and Melissa Hope Moore, of Law
Office of Melissa H. Moore, LLC, of Fountain Inn, for
Respondent.

Attorney General Alan McCrory Wilson, Solicitor
General Robert D. Cook, Deputy Solicitor General J.
Emory Smith, Jr., and Assistant Attorney General Ian
Parks Weschler, all of Columbia, for Intervenor.
LOCKEMY, C.J.: In this appeal from the family court's dismissal of Cathy
Swicegood's complaint alleging the existence of a common-law marriage with her
same-sex partner, Polly Thompson, Swicegood argues the family court erred by
dismissing the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. We affirm.

FACTS

In March 2014, Swicegood filed an action in family court seeking an order
recognizing the existence of a common-law marriage, a decree of separate support
and maintenance, alimony, equitable division of marital property, and related
relief. Swicegood alleged she and Thompson cohabited as sole domestic partners
for over thirteen years until December 10, 2013, agreed to be married, and held
themselves out publicly as a married couple. She alleged the couple exchanged
and wore wedding rings, co-owned property as joint tenants with the right of
survivorship, included each other as devisees in their respective wills, and shared a
joint bank account. Swicegood further alleged Thompson listed her as a "domestic
partner/qualified beneficiary" on Thompson's health insurance and as a beneficiary
on her retirement account.

Thompson moved under Rule 12(b)(1) of the South Carolina Rules of Civil
Procedure to dismiss the action, alleging the family court lacked subject matter
jurisdiction over Swicegood's complaint because the parties were not married and
lacked the capacity to marry. In response, Swicegood filed a memorandum and
several affidavits. In her own affidavit, she attested Thompson proposed marriage
to her on September 16, 2008, and the parties were declared married approximately
two and a half years later during a ceremony in Las Vegas, Nevada on February
12, 2011.1 In addition, Swicegood submitted the affidavits of two individuals who
each attested they witnessed a wedding ceremony between Swicegood and
Thompson in Las Vegas on February 12, 2011. Finally, Swicegood included the
affidavit of a person who stated she spoke to Thompson a few weeks after the
couple separated and Thompson said, "If our marriage was legal in South Carolina,
I would be in a world of s--t."


1
 Until 2014, Nevada law prohibited same-sex marriage. See Latta v. Otter, 771
F.3d 456, 464 (9th Cir. 2014) (holding Nevada's statute and constitutional
amendment "preventing same-sex couples from marrying and refusing to recognize
same-sex marriages validly performed elsewhere" to be unconstitutional).
Thompson likewise submitted a memorandum and several exhibits in support of
her motion to dismiss. She argued that in August 2012 and September 2013, she
and Swicegood signed affidavits of domestic partnership in which they
acknowledged they had "a close personal relationship in lieu of a lawful marriage,"
were "unmarried" and "not married to anyone." Thompson contended these
documents indicated the parties did not hold themselves out as a married couple.
In her affidavit, Thompson attested Swicegood knew they were not married. She
stated she and Swicegood participated in a "commitment ceremony" in Las Vegas
"on a lark," but they knew it was not a wedding and that they could not legally
marry in Nevada. Thompson attested she gave Swicegood several rings during
their relationship, but she intended none of these to signify they were married. She
stated she was not and never had been married to Swicegood: "We both knew that
if we wanted to get married, we could go to a state that allowed same-sex marriage.
It was not our intent to enter into marriage, and we did not." Thompson also stated
she witnessed Swicegood marry another woman in a ceremony in 1995.

Thompson submitted the affidavits of several individuals. One affiant stated she
was present at the ceremony in Las Vegas but characterized it as a commitment
ceremony, not a wedding, and stated she never heard Thompson refer to
Swicegood as her spouse. Two other affiants also attested Thompson never
referred to Swicegood as her spouse or described their relationship as a marriage.
Finally, a reverend attested he performed a "holy union" between Swicegood and
another woman in 1995.

The family court dismissed Swicegood's complaint on May 7, 2014, concluding it
lacked subject matter jurisdiction to adjudicate the issues because a common-law
marriage was not legally possible pursuant to section 20-1-15 of the South
Carolina Code (2014),2 which was still in force at the time. Swicegood appealed.
While Swicegood's appeal was pending, the Supreme Court of the United States
decided Obergefell v. Hodges, in which it held "same-sex couples may exercise the
fundamental right to marry," and the state laws challenged in that case were
"invalid to the extent they exclude same-sex couples from civil marriage on the

2
  ("A marriage between persons of the same sex is void ab initio and against the
public policy of this State."); see also S.C. Const. art. XVII, § 15 ("A marriage
between one man and one woman is the only lawful domestic union that shall be
valid or recognized in this State"); S.C. Code Ann. § 20-1-10 (2014) (stating "[a]ll
persons, except . . . persons whose marriage is prohibited by this section, may
lawfully contract matrimony"); id. (stating "[n]o man shall marry . . . another man"
and "[n]o woman shall marry . . . another woman").
same terms and conditions as opposite-sex couples."3 135 S. Ct. 2584, 2604-05
(2015). Consequently, this court issued an unpublished opinion remanding the
case to the family court with instructions to "consider the implications of
Obergefell on its subject matter jurisdiction." See Swicegood v. Thompson,
2016-UP-013 (S.C. Ct. App. filed Jan. 13, 2016).

Upon remand, the family court directed the parties to brief the following questions:
(1) whether Obergefell applied to common-law marriages and (2) whether
Obergefell applied retroactively.4 After hearing argument on these questions, the
family court again concluded it lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the matters
raised in Swicegood's complaint, finding that although Obergefell applied to
common-law marriages, it could not retroactively create a common-law marriage
between Swicegood and Thompson. The court concluded Obergefell could not
"logically be read to exclude common-law marriages," and so long as South
Carolina continued to recognize the validity of common-law marriages for
opposite-sex couples, it had "a constitutionally mandated duty to recognize the
validity of common-law marriages for same-sex couples." The court did not
expressly resolve the question of whether Obergefell applied retroactively, but it
concluded the couple could not have formed a common-law marriage because
section 20-1-15 was in place throughout the couple's thirteen-year period of
cohabitation, and they believed they lacked the legal right to be a married couple
during that time. The court, therefore, concluded the couple could not have formed
the requisite intention and mutual agreement to be married. Additionally, the
family court concluded that even assuming Swicegood and Thompson cohabited
with an actual intent and mutual agreement to be married, section 20-1-15 acted as
a legal impediment to the creation of a common-law marriage between them. The
court therefore concluded the couple could not have formed such marriage unless
they renewed their intention and agreement to be married after the Obergefell
decision triggered the removal of the impediment. Accordingly, the family court

3
  Earlier, on November 20, 2014, the U.S. District Court struck down South
Carolina's ban on same-sex marriage as unconstitutional. Condon v. Haley, 21 F.
Supp. 3d 572, 587 (D.S.C. 2014) (holding "to the extent they seek to prohibit the
marriage of same[-]sex couples who otherwise meet all other legal requirements
for marriage in South Carolina," South Carolina's statutory and constitutional
provisions prohibiting same-sex marriage "unconstitutionally infringe on the rights
of [the p]laintiffs under the Due Process Clause and Equal Protection Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and are invalid as a
matter of law").
4
  The family court also approved a consent order allowing the State to intervene.
reaffirmed its dismissal based on lack of subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to
Rule 12(b)(1), SCRCP. This appeal followed.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

"The question of subject matter jurisdiction is a question of law." Porter v. Labor
Depot, 372 S.C. 560, 567, 643 S.E.2d 96, 100 (Ct. App. 2007). Likewise,
"[w]hether a common-law marriage exists is a question of law." Callen v. Callen,
365 S.C. 618, 623, 620 S.E.2d 59, 62 (2005). "This Court reviews all questions of
law de novo." Fesmire v. Digh, 385 S.C. 296, 302, 683 S.E.2d 803, 807 (Ct. App.
2009); see also Harrell v. Pineland Plantation, Ltd., 337 S.C. 313, 320, 523 S.E.2d
766, 769 (1999) ("[T]his Court has the power and duty to review the entire record
and decide the jurisdictional facts in accord with the preponderance of the
evidence."). "[A]ffidavits and other evidence outside the pleadings may, in certain
circumstances, be considered in support of a motion to dismiss based on lack of
jurisdiction." Baird v. Charleston County, 333 S.C. 519, 529, 511 S.E.2d 69, 74
(1999).

LAW/ANALYSIS

I. Impediment

Swicegood acknowledges that when she and Thompson formed an intent and
mutual agreement to treat each other as spouses, section 20-1-15 was considered to
present an impediment to marriage and this "perceived impediment" continued to
exist throughout the relationship until they separated. She contends, however,
section 20-1-15 could not have functioned as an impediment because Obergefell
removed the impediment as a matter of constitutional law and the removal of the
impediment acted retroactively. Swicegood asserts the prohibition of same-sex
marriage could not have precluded the parties from forming a common-law
marriage as a matter of law because unconstitutional laws are void ab initio, which
requires our courts to treat such laws as if they never existed. She argues that if the
parties formed intent and mutual agreement to treat each other as spouses under the
common law, their marriage would be valid notwithstanding it occurred prior to
Obergefell and in light of Obergefell, the existence of a valid common-law
marriage would not be precluded as a matter of law. We disagree.

"Subject-matter jurisdiction is the 'power to hear and determine cases of the
general class to which the proceedings in question belong.'" Coon v. Coon, 364
S.C. 563, 566, 614 S.E.2d 616, 617 (2005) (quoting Dove v. Gold Kist, 314 S.C.
235, 237-38, 442 S.E.2d 598, 600 (1994)). The family court has jurisdiction to
hear and determine matters relating to common-law marriage. See S.C. Code Ann.
§ 63-3-530(B) (2010) (stating "the family court and the probate court have
concurrent jurisdiction to hear and determine matters relating to . . . common-law
marriage . . . except that the concurrent jurisdiction of the probate court extends
only to matters dealing with the estate, trust, and guardianship and conservatorship
actions before the probate court"); see also Bell v. Progressive Direct Ins. Co., 407
S.C. 565, 582 n.9, 757 S.E.2d 399, 407 n.9 (2014) (noting the family court has
exclusive jurisdiction to determine the existence of a common-law marriage when
the ultimate issue is the existence of a common-law marriage rather than heirship).
If no common-law marriage existed between the parties, the family court lacked
subject matter jurisdiction to hear any other matters Swicegood raised in her
complaint. See S.C. Code Ann. § 63-3-530(A)(2) (2010) ("The family court has
exclusive jurisdiction . . . to hear and determine actions for divorce a vinculo
matrimonii, separate support and maintenance, legal separation, and in other
marital litigation between the parties, and for settlement of all legal and equitable
rights of the parties in the actions in and to the real and personal property of the
marriage . . . ."). Thus, it was necessary for the court to first determine whether a
common-law marriage existed.

"A common-law marriage is formed when two parties contract to be married."
Callen, 365 S.C. at 624, 620 S.E.2d at 62. "A valid common[-]law marriage
requires that the facts and circumstances show an intention on the part of both
parties to enter into a marriage contract, usually evidenced by a public and
unequivocal declaration by the parties." Owens v. Owens, 320 S.C. 543, 545, 466
S.E.2d 373, 375 (Ct. App. 1996). "The fact finder is to look for mutual assent: the
intent of each party to be married to the other and a mutual understanding of each
party's intent." Callen, 365 S.C. at 624, 620 S.E.2d at 62.

             When, however, there is an impediment to marriage, such
             as one party's existing marriage to a third person, no
             common-law marriage may be formed, regardless
             whether mutual assent is present. Further, after the
             impediment is removed, the relationship is not
             automatically transformed into a common-law marriage.
             Instead, it is presumed that relationship remains
             non-marital.

Id. "[F]or a common[-]law marriage to arise, the parties must agree to enter into a
common[-]law marriage after the impediment is removed, though such agreement
may be gathered from the conduct of the parties." Yarbrough v. Yarbrough, 280
S.C. 546, 551, 314 S.E.2d 16, 19 (Ct. App. 1984). Although much of our
decisional law regarding impediments involves bigamous relationships, in Callen,
our supreme court held an impediment to common-law marriage existed due to the
couple's residency in jurisdictions that did not recognize common-law marriage.
Id. at 624-25, 620 S.E.2d at 63. Our supreme court held that due to the couple's
residency in such jurisdictions until the couple moved to South Carolina, there was
an impediment to the marriage, and "no common-law marriage could have been
formed, if at all, until after the move." Id. Thus, our courts have recognized an
impediment to marriage outside of the context of a bigamous relationship.

In Obergefell, the United States Supreme Court held,

            [T]he right to marry is a fundamental right inherent in the
            liberty of the person, and under the Due Process and
            Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment
            couples of the same-sex may not be deprived of that right
            and that liberty. The Court now holds that same-sex
            couples may exercise the fundamental right to marry. No
            longer may this liberty be denied to them. Baker v.
            Nelson[5] must be and now is overruled, and the State
            laws challenged by Petitioners in these cases are now
            held invalid to the extent they exclude same-sex couples
            from civil marriage on the same terms and conditions as
            opposite-sex couples.

135 S. Ct. at 2604-05.6 Obergefell did not expressly instruct state courts in
whether to apply its holding prospectively or retrospectively. However, the United
States Supreme Court applies a general rule of retroactivity. See Solem v. Stumes,
465 U.S. 638, 642 (1984) ("As a rule, judicial decisions apply 'retroactively.'"
(quoting Robinson v. Neil, 409 U.S. 505, 507-08 (1973))); see also Ranolls v.
Dewling, 223 F. Supp. 3d 613, 619 (E.D. Tex. 2016) ("Generally, in both civil and
criminal cases, unconstitutional laws and rules are void ab initio, or void from


5
  409 U.S. 810 (1972) (holding, in a summary decision, the exclusion of same-sex
couples from marriage did not present a substantial federal question).
6
  As we noted, the U.S. District Court for the District of South Carolina struck
down South Carolina's statutory and constitutional provisions prohibiting same-sex
marriage on November 20, 2014. See Condon, 21 F. Supp. 3d at 587.
inception, as if they never existed."); id. (noting that "[o]ver the years, the Supreme
Court has issued a series of decisions addressing retroactivity and its limitations").

In Harper v. Virginia Department of Taxation, the Court expressly repudiated
selective application of new rules based on the equities of a particular case. 509
U.S. 86, 95-97 (1993). The Court first acknowledged it previously "permitted the
denial of retroactive effect to 'a new principle of law'" in civil cases "if such a
limitation would avoid 'injustice or hardship' without unduly undermining the
'purpose and effect' of the new rule." Id. at 94-95 (quoting Chevron Oil Co. v.
Huson, 404 U.S. at 106-07 (1971))). The Court then announced,

             We now prohibit the erection of selective temporal
             barriers to the application of federal law in noncriminal
             cases. In both civil and criminal cases, we can scarcely
             permit "the substantive law [to] shift and spring"
             according to "the particular equities of [individual
             parties'] claims" of actual reliance on an old rule and of
             harm from a retroactive application of the new rule.

Id. at 97 (alterations in original) (quoting James B. Beam Distilling Co. v. Georgia,
501 U.S. 529, 543 (1991)); see also Reynoldsville Casket Co. v. Hyde, 514 U.S.
749, 752 (1995) (acknowledging Harper overruled Chevron Oil "insofar as the
case (selectively) permitted the prospective-only application of a new rule of law").
The Court adopted the following rule in Harper:

             When [the Supreme Court] applies a rule of federal law
             to the parties before it, that rule is the controlling
             interpretation of federal law and must be given full
             retroactive effect in all cases still open on direct review
             and as to all events, regardless of whether such events
             predate or postdate our announcement of the rule.

509 U.S. at 97; see also Reynoldsville Casket Co., 514 U.S. at 752 (acknowledging
the Court's holding in Harper that "when (1) the Court decides a case and applies
the (new) legal rule of that case to the parties before it, then (2) it and other courts
must treat that same (new) legal rule as 'retroactive,' applying it, for example, to all
pending cases, whether or not those cases involve predecision events").

Several jurisdictions that have recognized informal or common-law marriages have
applied Obergefell retroactively to find litigants were entitled to establish
common-law marriages even when such marriages were created and ended—either
by death or separation—before Obergefell was decided. See In re Marriage of
Hogsett & Neale, 2018 COA 176, ¶ 24 ("In states like Colorado that recognize
common[-]law marriage, retroactive application of Obergefell means that same-sex
couples must be accorded the same right as opposite-sex couples to prove a
common[-]law marriage even when the alleged conduct establishing the marriage
pre-dates Obergefell."), cert. granted in part, 2019 WL 4751467 (Colo. 2019)
(granting certiorari in part to consider whether the court of appeals erred in
affirming the trial court's finding that no common-law marriage existed); Gill v.
Nostrand, 206 A.3d 869, 874-75 (D.C. 2019) ("We now expressly
recognize . . . that a same-sex couple may enter into common-law marriage in the
District of Columbia and that this rule applies retroactively. Thus, the trial court
was correct in ruling that 'a party in a same-sex relationship must be given the
opportunity to prove a common[-]law marriage, even at a time when same-sex
marriage was not legal . . . .'"); Ranolls, 223 F. Supp. 3d 613 (holding Obergefell
applied retroactively to allow the partner of the decedent in a wrongful death case
to assert a claim as an alleged common-law spouse even though the decedent died
prior to the Obergefell decision and there was a genuine issue of material fact as to
the couple's marital status at the time of the decedent's death, making summary
judgment inappropriate); In re Estate of Carter, 159 A.3d 970, 972 (Pa. Super. Ct.
2017) (holding "the United States Constitution mandates that same-sex couples
have the same right to prove a common[-]law marriage as do opposite-sex couples"
notwithstanding the alleged spouse died before Obergefell was decided).

Our review of United States Supreme Court decisional law compels the conclusion
Obergefell must be applied retroactively. See Harper, 509 U.S. at 100 ("The
Supremacy Clause . . . does not allow federal retroactivity doctrine to be
supplanted by the invocation of a contrary approach to retroactivity under state
law. Whatever freedom state courts may enjoy to limit the retroactive operation of
their own interpretations of state law . . . cannot extend to their interpretations of
federal law."); see also Am. Trucking Ass'ns, Inc. v. Smith, 496 U.S. 167, 177
(1990) (plurality opinion) ("The determination whether a constitutional decision of
[the United States Supreme] Court is retroactive—that is, whether the decision
applies to conduct or events that occurred before the date of the decision—is a
matter of federal law. When questions of state law are at issue, state courts
generally have the authority to determine the retroactivity of their own decisions.").

Nevertheless, the Supreme Court has noted, "[A]s courts apply 'retroactively' a new
rule of law to pending cases, they will find instances where that new rule, for
well-established legal reasons, does not determine the outcome of the case."
Reynoldsville Casket Co., 514 U.S. at 758-59. Because we found federal law
requires us to apply Obergefell retroactively, the question we now consider is
whether the family court's finding that the prohibition on same-sex marriage acted
as an impediment is an appropriate independent legal basis under South Carolina
law to affirm its decision. See id. at 76 (noting such well-established legal reasons
may include "a pre-existing, separate, independent rule of state law, having nothing
to do with retroactivity").

Swicegood urges us to apply the reasoning the Superior Court of Pennsylvania
applied in Carter, 159 A.3d 970. We decline to do so. There, the court reversed
the trial court's holding that it was legally impossible for a same-sex couple to have
entered into a common-law marriage before common-law marriages were
abolished in Pennsylvania because, at the time, it was not legal for same-sex
couples to enter into a common-law marriage. Id. at 977. Pennsylvania's
legislature abolished common-law marriage effective January 1, 2005, but its
marriage laws permitted "the legal recognition of common-law marriages
contracted before January 1, 2005." Id. at 974. In Carter, the appellant alleged he
and his same-sex partner, who died before Obergefell was decided, had previously
entered into a common-law marriage. Id. at 972-73. The superior court held
because state laws prohibiting same-sex couples from marrying had been declared
unconstitutional, such laws could not preclude a same-sex couple from establishing
the existence of a pre-2005 common-law marriage. Id. at 977-78. Although the
court applied Obergefell retroactively, it did not consider the question of whether
the statute prohibiting same-sex marriage acted as an impediment prior to its
invalidation. Thus, we find Carter does not assist us in deciding the matter at issue
in this case.

Conversely, Thompson argues In re Estate of Leyton, 22 N.Y.S.3d 422 (N.Y. App.
Div. 2016), supports her argument Obergefell does not require this court to "reach
back in time and find a legal marriage existed" when South Carolina did not
recognize such marriages. In Leyton, a decedent's family member filed a petition
to disqualify his same-sex partner, Hunter, as the executor and beneficiary under
his will, arguing Hunter was a "former spouse" under the former spouse provisions
of New York's probate law. Id. at 423. Hunter and the decedent participated in a
"Commitment Ceremony" in 2002 and informally separated in 2010 without
undergoing any kind of "dissolution ceremony analogous to the commitment
ceremony." Id. New York did not recognize same-sex marriage until 2011. Id.
The appellate court affirmed the trial court's denial of the petition and stated
Obergefell "d[id] not compel a retroactive declaration that the 'Commitment
Ceremony' entered into by decedent and Hunter in 2002, when same-sex marriage
was not recognized under New York law, was a legally valid marriage for purposes
of the 'former spouse' provisions." Id. It further opined, "Even assuming that
[their] . . . union should be retroactively recognized as having constituted a legal
marriage, in order for [the statute's] 'former spouse' provisions to apply, the end of
the marital relationship must have been effected by a formal judicial 'decree or
judgment.'" Id. The court concluded Hunter should not be disqualified as the
executor or beneficiary because there was no formal judicial divorce decree and he
was therefore not a former spouse. Id. Leyton is distinguishable and of little
guidance here. New York does not recognize common-law marriages. See In re
Mott v. Duncan Petroleum Transp., 414 N.E.2d 657, 658 (N.Y. 1980) (noting New
York state law did not recognize common-law marriages unless the marriage was
validly contracted in another state that sanctioned common-law marriage). Thus,
there was no basis for the appellate court to validate the couple's commitment
ceremony.

We find the family court did not err by determining section 20-1-15 constituted an
impediment to the formation of a common-law marriage between Swicegood and
Thompson. Here, for the duration of the parties' relationship, South Carolina
prohibited same-sex marriage. See § 20-1-15 ("A marriage between persons of the
same sex is void ab initio and against the public policy of this State."). Both
parties acknowledged this fact in their pleadings. Pursuant to the Court's holding
in Obergefell, section 20-1-15 is unconstitutional and no longer valid law. See
Obergefell, 135 S. Ct. at 2604-05 (holding the state laws at issue in that case were
"invalid to the extent they exclude same-sex couples from civil marriage on the
same terms and conditions as opposite-sex couples"). Nevertheless, because the
statute was in effect during the time Swicegood alleges the parties formed a
common-law marriage, it acted as an impediment, which prevented them from
creating a valid marriage. See Callen, 365 S.C. at 624, 620 S.E.2d at 62
("When . . . there is an impediment to marriage . . . no common-law marriage may
be formed, regardless whether mutual assent is present. Further, after the
impediment is removed, the relationship is not automatically transformed into a
common-law marriage. Instead, it is presumed that relationship remains
non-marital."); Yarbrough, 280 S.C. at 551, 314 S.E.2d at 19 ("In order for a
common[-]law marriage to arise, the parties must agree to enter into a
common[-]law marriage after the impediment is removed, though such agreement
may be gathered from the conduct of the parties.").

Although we must apply Obergefell retroactively, retroactive application of the
decision does not require us to ignore the fact the law operated as an impediment to
the formation of a common-law marriage between same-sex couples when it was
still in force. Our state law concerning impediments to marriage is "a pre-existing,
separate, independent rule of state law, having nothing to do with retroactivity,"
which formed an "independent legal basis" for the family court's dismissal of
Swicegood's complaint. See Reynoldsville Casket Co., 514 U.S. at 757-59 (noting
a court may find "a previously existing, independent legal basis . . . for denying
relief" such that the new rule, despite retroactivity, does not determine the outcome
of the case). Our state laws prohibiting same-sex marriage constituted an
impediment to the formation of a common-law marriage until the impediment was
removed. As with any impediment to marriage, Swicegood and Thompson were
required to enter into a new agreement to be married after the removal of the
impediment, either by way of participating in a civil ceremony or by renewing
their agreement to assume a marital relationship.

To determine whether the impediment prevented Swicegood and Thompson from
forming a common-law marriage as a matter of law, we must first determine when
the removal of the impediment occurred. The family court found the impediment
remained in place until the Obergefell decision and declined to consider whether
the date of the Condon decision was relevant to its analysis. Although the parties
do not directly address this point on appeal, Thompson acknowledges South
Carolina began recognizing same-sex marriages on November 20, 2014—the date
Condon went into effect. Because the impediment to the marriage was the
existence of South Carolina's laws prohibiting same-sex marriage, we find the
earliest date upon which the removal of the impediment could have occurred was
November 20, 2014, when the U.S. District Court struck down those laws. See
Condon, 21 F. Supp. 3d at 587. Here, it is undisputed the parties' relationship
ended and they ceased cohabiting in 2013. Under these circumstances, the parties
could not have formed a common-law marriage because they did not renew their
agreement to be married after the removal of the impediment. Accordingly, we
find the family court did not err by dismissing the matter for lack of subject matter
jurisdiction.

We emphasize our decision is limited to only those circumstances under which
neither party disputes the alleged marital relationship ended prior to November 20,
2014. When a purported spouse brings an action in family court to establish the
existence of a common-law marriage with a person of the same sex and neither
party disputes the relationship ended before November 20, 2014, the couple could
not have formed a common-law marriage as a matter of law.
II. Intent

Swicegood contends the family court erred by finding the parties lacked intent as a
matter of law because the question of intent and mutual agreement is a question of
fact distinct from the issue of whether an impediment prevented the marriage from
having legal effect. We disagree.

"Whether a common-law marriage exists is a question of law." Callen, 365 S.C. at
624, 620 S.E.2d at 62. "A common-law marriage is formed when two parties
contract to be married." Id. "A valid common[-]law marriage requires that the
facts and circumstances show an intention on the part of both parties to enter into a
marriage contract, usually evidenced by a public and unequivocal declaration by
the parties." Owens, 320 S.C. at 545, 466 S.E.2d at 375.

             The fact finder is to look for mutual assent: the intent of
             each party to be married to the other and a mutual
             understanding of each party's intent. Consideration is the
             participation in the marriage. If these factual elements
             are present, then the court should find as a matter of law
             that a common-law marriage exists.

Callen, 365 S.C. at 624, 620 S.E.2d at 62. "A party . . . must at least know that his
actions will render him married as that word is commonly understood." Id. at 626,
620 S.E.2d at 63. "If a party does not comprehend that his 'intentions and actions'
will bind him in a 'legally binding marital relationship,' then he lacks intent to be
married." Id. "The proponent of the alleged marriage has the burden of proving
the elements by a preponderance of the evidence." Id. at 623, 620 S.E.2d at 62; but
see Stone v. Thompson, 428 S.C. 79, 89, 833 S.E.2d 266, 271 (2019) (holding the
burden of proof is now clear and convincing evidence in cases filed after July 24,
2019).

Although Swicegood asserts she and Thompson agreed to live as a married couple,
both parties acknowledged in their pleadings that section 20-1-15 presented a
barrier to marriage throughout their relationship. Because they acknowledge their
awareness that this law prevented them from marrying in this state during their
relationship, we find Swicegood and Thompson could not have formed the intent
and mutual agreement to enter a legally binding marital relationship. See Callen,
365 S.C. at 626, 620 S.E.2d at 63. Accordingly, we find the family court did not
err by concluding Swicegood and Thompson could not have formed the requisite
intention and agreement to be married as a matter of law.
CONCLUSION

Consistent with the Supreme Court's opinion in Obergefell, we hold section
20-1-15 is unconstitutional and is no longer valid law. We hold the Obergefell
decision must be applied retroactively. Nevertheless, the law acted as an
impediment to marriage during the time it was still in effect. Therefore, the parties
were required to renew their agreement to marry after the removal of the
impediment. Because the parties' relationship ended before South Carolina's
prohibition of same-sex marriage was struck down, they could not have formed a
common-law marriage as a matter of law. Moreover, because the parties
acknowledge they knew they could not legally marry in this state during the
entirety of their relationship, they could not have formed the intent and mutual
agreement to enter a legally binding marital relationship. Based on the foregoing,
the family court's dismissal of Swicegood's complaint for lack of subject matter
jurisdiction is

AFFIRMED.

HUFF, J., concurs.

HILL, J., concurring in result:

I agree with the majority that federal law requires Obergefell to be applied
retroactively. I also agree we are bound by Callen, which holds that "[i]f a party
does not comprehend that his intentions and actions will bind him in a legally
binding marital relationship, then he lacks intent to be married." Callen, 365 S.C.
at 626, 620 S.E.2d at 63 (quotations removed). I therefore concur in the result the
majority reaches.
