QUESTION
               You have asked whether a divorce between the number holder, Justino M~ (the "NH"),
                  and Manuela M~ (the "claimant"), granted on June 9, 1998, but not recorded for failure
                  to pay fees, is nonetheless valid.
               
               SUMMARY OF EVIDENCE
               The NH and the claimant were married in Alameda County, California in 1964. The claimant
                  petitioned for dissolution of the marriage in Alameda County on March 30, 1982. The
                  next day, the Alameda County court issued an order for modification, which addresses
                  child custody rights, child and spousal support requirements, residence issues and
                  attorney's fees through the impending hearing, which was scheduled for April 26, 1982.
                  The case number assigned to the divorce proceedings was H-82064-2. On a form page
                  after "Order to Show Cause" regarding the modification order, the court provided additional
                  notes. The care, custody and control of the parties' minor children was awarded to
                  the claimant with reasonable visitation rights to the NH, the NH was to pay $200 per
                  child per month in support payments and $600 per month in spousal support commencing
                  May 1, 1982. The NH was excluded from the family home.
               
               The next document for case number "H082064-2" in the file is dated June 9, 1998. Under
                  the heading "Disposition," the document indicates that the Order to Show Cause was
                  "continued from" April 14, 1998. The claimant was not present. The NH's "motion to
                  bifurcate" was granted, and "subject to the respondent [the NH] paying the response
                  fee," judgment of dissolution of the parties' marriage was granted "as to status only."
                  The parties were "restored to the status of unmarried persons on June 9, 1998." Spousal
                  support was reduced to zero "as of April 14, 1998." The NH's attorney was "to submit
                  Judgment." A computer-generated history of the case indicated that a "judgment dissolution
                  status only" was filed on June 9, 1998. On the copy of the document in our file, this
                  entry was highlighted before being copied and thus is illegible. However, Virginia
                  W~ of the San Leandro Field Office referenced the entry in her original request for
                  assistance from the Regional Office on August 25, 2006.
               
               Ms. W~ also indicated that these documents were provided to the field office by the
                  court. The computer-generated history indicates that action occurred in the divorce
                  in 1996, 1997, 2002 and 2003.
               
               On August 28, 2006, the claimant applied for wife's insurance benefits as a divorced
                  spouse on the NH's account. In her application, she indicated that she married the
                  NH on October 15, 1964, and that her marriage ended by divorce on January 1, 1998
                  in California. She was not married at the time she applied. In an undated statement,
                  she indicated that the NH told her he was filing for divorce in 1996. She said she
                  had been notified of a court date in "about 1999" but did not appear at the hearing
                  because she did not want to be involved in a conflict with the NH. She stated that
                  she believed she was divorced because she had been awarded child and spousal support.
                  She said she went to the court to get a copy of her divorce decree and was told that
                  she was divorced but needed to pay for "the final divorce fees." The claimant indicated
                  that all proceedings took place in Alameda County.
               
               In an August 10, 2006, development request, the Manteca, California Field Office noted
                  that, while the claimant said she was married to the NH until 1996 or 1997, the NH
                  reported on his application for benefits that he had been married to the claimant
                  until 1978, and had remarried in 1983. The request was to contact the NH and find
                  out if he ever received a final divorce and to get a copy of the order. The report
                  further indicates that the claimant's second wife was not old enough to file for benefits
                  but that the divorce issue needed to be resolved because it affected both women. In
                  the development notes, Technical Expert, Cindy G~, reported that she had contacted
                  the NH, who reported that he had separated from the claimant in 1978 and had "a paralegal
                  complete the documents." The NH said that he had remarried in 1983 thinking he was
                  divorced. He reported that, "about a year ago," his son-in-law went to the court to
                  get a copy of the divorce decree and was told that the judge did not sign the document.
                  Ms. G~ reported that the parties were in the process of requesting the court to grant
                  the divorce retroactively and would contact SSA as soon as the decree was available.
               
               In a report of contact dated August 18, 2006, Claims Representative, Lupita T~, noted
                  that she had spoken with the NH, who stated that he had been informed by the Alameda
                  County court that his divorce was never finalized and was thus invalid. The NH said
                  that he had hired a man he thought was an attorney to handle the divorce but that
                  the final paperwork was never signed or submitted. The NH said he was advised that
                  "this had to be filed again" and that it could take up to six months. In the meantime,
                  the NH said he was informed that he was still married to the claimant. The NH was
                  advised to submit evidence of the divorce. He said that he believed he was divorced
                  when he married his second wife.
               
               In her request for assistance, Ms. W~ noted that the field office checked with the
                  court clerk and was "told that [the parties] were divorced on June 9, 1998 but they
                  did not pay the final fee to have it recorded."
               
               ANALYSIS
               A claimant is entitled to wife's insurance benefits as a divorced spouse if she has
                  reached age 62 (or has a qualifying child in her care), is not married, and is not
                  entitled to old-age or disability insurance benefits, or is entitled to such benefits
                  in an amount that is less than half of the primary insurance amount of the NH. 42
                  U.S.C. § 402(b); 20 C.F.R. § 404.331 (2006). The claimant is considered a divorced
                  wife if she had been married to the NH for ten yeas prior to the date the divorce
                  became effective. 42 U.S.C. § 416(d)(1); 20 C.F.R. § 404.331(a)(2) (2006) ("10 years
                  immediately before your divorce became final."). Program Operations Manual System
                  (POMS) GN 00305.170(B)(1)(c) directs further development when there is a "technical defect" in divorce
                  proceedings, "e.g., [the] decree was not recorded properly, court costs [were] not
                  paid, etc." The required development under this provision includes getting "a certified
                  copy of the divorce decree" and "[a] statement from the clerk of court as to whether
                  the records substantiate the allegation as to the defect" and "[c]ertifications of
                  the pertinent court record entries." POMS GN 00305.170(B)(2)(b). The field office's development of this matter indicates that the parties
                  were divorced on June 9, 1998, but their divorce was not recorded because they did
                  not pay the fee. Although the file contains conflicting information, the documents
                  provided by the court support this version of events.
               
               The claimant's version of events is also similar to the court clerk's statement; she
                  reported that she had been told by the court that she was divorced but had not paid
                  the recording fee. The NH reported, however, that he had been told by the Alameda
                  County court that no divorce had occurred and he was still married to the claimant.
                  We doubt the accuracy of this statement given the fact that the court clerk told SSA
                  that the parties were divorced but for payment of the fee. Moreover, the records provided
                  by the court direct that "subject to the [NH] paying the response fee," dissolution
                  of the parties' marriage was granted, and the parties were "restored to the status
                  of unmarried persons on June 9, 1998."
               
               As set forth above, the POMS also requires "a certified copy of the divorce decree."
                  Id. We do not have a copy of the decree here, although we do have documents from the
                  court indicating that the divorce was granted pending the NH's payment of the fee.
                  California law, moreover, provides that a court may enter an order of dissolution
                  of a marriage retroactively, i.e., "nunc pro tunc," if it determines that by "mistake,
                  negligence, or inadvertence, the judgment has not been signed, filed and entered."
                  Cal. Fam. Code § 2346(a) (2006). Statements from the NH obtained on August 18, 2006,
                  indicate that the NH is in the process of obtaining such a nunc pro tunc judgment
                  of dissolution of his marriage to the claimant. The NH indicated that he would provide
                  SSA with a copy of any such order as soon as possible.
               
               POMS GN 00305.170(B)(3) further directs that in any case where "there is a question as to whether the
                  divorce is invalid or ineffective," an opinion from the Regional Chief Counsel should
                  be sought. This appears to be an issue of first impression in our region. In 1981,
                  the Regional Chief Counsel in Region VII issued an opinion stating that a couple who
                  could not produce a divorce decree from Virginia was still married when the NH died
                  in Michigan. Memorandum from OCG Region VII, Applicability of Estoppel to Deny Validity
                  of Divorce -- Michigan and Virginia (August 26, 1981). That opinion cautioned that,
                  if the issue was a "technical defect" in the parties' divorce, a different question
                  would have been presented. This matter presents a technical defect. In fact, the court
                  clerk told SSA that the parties' were divorced but had not paid the proper fees. The
                  NH is in the process of correcting this technical defect in the divorce. We further
                  note that the 1981 opinion was premised on applicable state law. We have not found
                  California law stating that the parties are not divorced because they failed to pay
                  fees. It is thus our conclusion that you may treat the divorce as valid for the purposes
                  of determining the claimant's eligibility for wife's insurance benefits as divorced
                  spouse.
               
               Our conclusion is also indirectly supported by California law directing that the validity
                  of a second marriage is presumed. The presumption may be rebutted, by the individual
                  seeking to invalidate the second marriage by proving that the first marriage had not
                  ended in death, divorce or annulment. Vargas v. Superior Court, 88 Cal.Rptr. 281, 283 (1970), citing Cal. Evid. Code §§ 604, 606, 663; see also Cal. Evid. Code § 605. In this case, although the parties are unclear on significant
                  dates, no one contests the fact that the NH and the claimant were divorced, and no
                  one contests the validity of the NH's second marriage.
               
               As noted, the parties do not appear to be clear on the relevant dates in this matter.
                  The claimant has repeatedly stated that she was divorced in the 1990s, varying her
                  account from 1996 to 1999 yet she was the one who petitioned for dissolution of her
                  marriage in March 1982. The NH sometimes indicated that he was divorced in 1978 but
                  also claims that he filed for and was granted a divorce in 1996, and he unwaveringly
                  claims that he remarried in 1983 believing that he was divorced. There is documentation
                  of a divorce as early as 1982, and it appears that the claimant received the spousal
                  and child support she was awarded pursuant to the 1982 proceedings. Thus, notwithstanding
                  the court's 1998 judgment of dissolution, it appears that the parties could seek to
                  have the nunc pro tunc judgment relate back to 1982. The court may enter judgment
                  nunc pro tunc "even though the judgment may have been previously entered, where through
                  mistake, negligence, or inadvertence the judgment was not entered as soon as it could
                  have been entered under the law if applied for." Cal Fam. Code § 2346(c). Indeed,
                  although it is not directly at issue here, having the dissolution apply to 1982 appears
                  to be necessary for the NH to avoid issues regarding the validity of his current marriage.
                  Since the NH and claimant were married in 1964, i.e., more than ten years before their
                  divorce, it is immaterial to the claimant's application for divorced spouse's benefits
                  whether she was divorced in 1982 or 1998.
               
               CONCLUSION
               The parties' divorce was granted but not recorded due to the failure to pay fees.
                  The NH is in the process of obtaining a nunc pro tunc order granting the divorce retroactively.
                  In the meantime, you may treat the divorce as valid for the purposes of the claimant's
                  eligibility for wife's insurance benefits as divorced spouse.