QUESTION PRESENTED
               For purposes of the claimant G~s (G~’s or second wife’s) application for surviving
                  spouse benefits on the record of O~, the number holder (NH), you asked us to determine
                  whether the NH was validly married to G~, his purported second wife, at the time of
                  his death in 2001.
               
               ANSWER
               Based on the evidence submitted, we believe that the marriage between G~ and the NH
                  was void under Arkansas law because at the time of their marriage, the NH was not
                  yet divorced from his first wife. As such, G~ was not validly married to the NH at
                  the time of his death in 2001 and is not entitled to benefits on the NH’s account
                  as a surviving spouse, or widow.[1]
               BACKGROUND
               The NH passed away on October XX, 2001 while domiciled in Arkansas. There is evidence
                  indicating that the NH potentially had three marriages to three different women, and
                  it is our understanding that the Social Security Administration (SSA or agency) has
                  been paying widow’s benefits to the NH’s third wife, C~, on his record since 2002.
                  Because your legal opinion request concerns only the NH’s purported second wife, G~,
                  and her entitlement to widow’s benefits as the NH’s widow, we focus on G~’s status
                  as the NH’s widow. To the extent helpful in examining G~’s status as the NH’s widow,
                  we summarize the evidence submitted as to the NH’s three marriages.
               
               The NH’s First Purported Marriage To R~
               An Arkansas marriage certificate shows that the NH and R~(R~ or first wife) were married
                  in a solemnized marriage ceremony in Arkansas on September XX, 1972. The evidence
                  indicates that R~ and the NH filed for a divorce in Minneapolis, Minnesota on June
                  XX, 1992, and that on December XX, 1992 “judicial review” was “approved.” See R~ v. O~, No. 27-FA-00018XXXXX (Hennepin Family Court, Minnesota). We do not have a copy of
                  the final divorce decree showing the exact date the divorce was final.[2] R~ died on August XX, 1998.
               
               The NH’s Second Purported Marriage to G~
               On March XX, 2015, G~ filed a claim for benefits on the NH’s record as a surviving
                  spouse, and it is this claim that is the subject of this present legal opinion request.[3] The evidence includes a copy of an Arkansas marriage certificate showing that G~
                  and the NH married in a solemnized marriage ceremony in Arkansas on May XX, 1978,
                  while he was still married to R~. In a May 2015 statement to the agency, G~ stated
                  that she did not list her marriage to the NH in her February 2015 disability application
                  because she did not think it was legal. She stated that after she married the NH,
                  she found out that he was still married to his previous wife, R~, and that the NH
                  and R~ never divorced. The evidence includes an undated statement by the NH in which
                  the NH similarly stated that he did not divorce R~ before he married G~, as he did
                  not know he needed to divorce R~ in order to marry G~. In March 2015, the field office
                  contacted the St. Francis County, Arkansas circuit clerk’s office to inquire whether
                  there was record of a divorce between G~ and the NH, and the clerk’s office search
                  of records for the years 1979 through 2001 found no record of a divorce.
               
               G~ also provided a copy of an Arkansas marriage certificate showing that she married
                  J~ in Forrest City, St. Francis County, Arkansas on October XX, 1988, and that they
                  divorced on February XX, 1996 in Forrest City, Arkansas. J~ passed away on October
                  XX, 2005.
               
               The NH’s Third Purported Marriage to C~
               There is evidence that the NH married C~(C~ or third wife) on October XX, 1992, while
                  domiciled in Arkansas. C~ filed an application for widow’s benefits on the NH’s account
                  on October XX, 2001, in which she stated that she and the NH had lived together in
                  1988, that the NH left her in 1993, that she later moved to Missouri, but that she
                  did not file for a divorce from the NH and had not been notified that the NH filed
                  for divorce. Instead, she reported that their marriage ended with the NH’s death on
                  October XX, 2001. A 2002 letter from the agency shows that the agency had a marriage
                  license showing a marriage between the NH and C~, and that the agency had searched
                  for a divorce decree between C~ and the NH in St. Francis County, Arkansas and in
                  St. Louis County, Missouri and did not find such a decree.[4] In 2002, the agency granted C~’s application for widow’s benefits on the NH’s record,
                  and she currently receives widow’s benefits on the NH’s record.
               
               ANALYSIS
               A. Entitlement to Widow’s Benefits Under the Social Security Act
               Your legal opinion request concerns whether the NH was validly married to G~, his
                  purported second wife, at the time of his death in 2001. The Social Security Act (Act)
                  provides that a claimant may be eligible for benefits as an insured NH’s widow if
                  she was validly married to the NH at the time of his death, or if not validly married,
                  she would be able to inherit a spouse’s share under state intestate succession laws.
                  See 42 U.S.C. §§ 402(e)(1), 416(c)(1), (h)(1)(A); 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.335(a), 404.345.[5] There are additional requirements for entitlement to widow’s benefits that we do
                  not address, as they are not relevant to this legal opinion. See 42 U.S.C. § 402(e)(1)(A)-(D); 20 C.F.R. § 404.335(b)-(e). Because the Act directs
                  the agency to apply the law of the state where the NH had a permanent home at the
                  time of his death to determine the validity of a marriage and inheritance as a spouse
                  under intestate succession laws, Arkansas law controls. See 42 U.S.C. § 416(h)(1)(A); 20 C.F.R. § 404.345;20 C.F.R. § 404.303 (permanent home
                  means the true and fixed home or legal domicile of the insured individual).
               
               B. Under Arkansas Law, G~ has not Proven that She had a Valid Marriage to the NH at the
                     Time of the NH’s Death in 2001, Per 42 U.S.C. § 416(h)(1)(A)(i)
               Given that the NH has had multiple marriages, we begin our analysis by recognizing
                  that Arkansas law presumes that C~ is the NH’s legal widow because C~’s 1992 marriage
                  to the NH was his last marriage and because the agency is currently paying benefits
                  to C~ as his surviving spouse based upon evidence of her marriage to the NH. See Stokes v. Heckler, 773 F.2d 990, 991-92 (8th Cir. 1985) (under Arkansas law, the last ceremonial marriage
                  is presumed valid and is one of the strongest presumptions under Arkansas law); Blythe v. Blythe, 410 S.W.2d 379 (Ark. 1967) (“the presumption in favor of the validity of a marriage
                  is so strong that the one who attacks a subsequent marriage . . . has the difficult
                  burden”); Sims v. Powell’s Estate, 432 S.W.2d 838, 840 (Ark. 1968) (“positive proof” is necessary to rebut the presumption);
                  Bruno v. Bruno, 256 S.W.2d 341, 344 (Ark. 1953) (“where a man and woman are married and it is later
                  discovered that one of them has a living former spouse it will be presumed, in the
                  absence of proof to the contrary, that the former spouse had been divorce[d] at the
                  time of said marriage.”). For G~ to prove that she is the NH’s legal widow based on
                  her valid marriage to the NH, G~ has the heavy burden of providing “clear and decisive”
                  evidence to rebut the presumption of validity as to the NH’s marriage to C~. See Stokes, 773 F2d at 991-992 (it is a “heavy burden of proof imposed under Arkansas law on one
                  who would invalidate an apparently legal marriage”) (citing Missouri Pacific R.R. Co. v. Harris, 120 S.W.2d 695, 696 (Ark. 1938)).  
               As explained below, we find that G~ has not met her burden to overcome Arkansas’s
                  strong presumption in favor of the validity of the NH’s marriage to C~ because G~’s
                  1978 marriage to the NH was void.
               
               Although an Arkansas marriage certificate shows G~’s 1978 marriage to the NH, we also
                  have evidence showing that such a marriage was void because the NH was still married
                  to R~, his first wife, when he married G~. See Smiley v. Smiley, 448 S.W. 2d 642, 646 (Ark. 1970) (a ceremonial marriage to a person who has previously
                  been married and has never obtained a divorce is void from its inception and no court
                  decree is required to declare it void). Under Arkansas law, a void[6] marriage includes a subsequent marriage to an individual who was not yet divorced
                  from a living “former” spouse. See Acuna v. Sullivan, 765 F.Supp. 510, 513 (E.D. Ark. 1991) (finding a subsequent marriage before dissolution
                  of the prior marriage is void); Bruno, 256 S.W.2d at 343 (a ceremonial marriage to a person who has previously been married
                  and has never obtained a divorce is void); Ark. Code Ann. § 9-12-101. Such a marriage
                  is void even if one of the parties to the second marriage entered it in good faith.
                  See Standridge v. Standridge, 769 S.W.2d 12, 14 (Ark. 1989). As discussed below, the NH’s first wife, R~, was
                  still living and married to the NH at the time G~ and he purportedly married in 1978.
               
               An Arkansas marriage certificate shows that the NH and R~ were married in a solemnized
                  marriage ceremony in Arkansas on September XX, 1972. The field office contacted the
                  Hennepin County and the 4th District Family Court in Minneapolis, Minnesota, and the
                  county records showed that R~ and the NH’s divorce was filed and finalized around
                  20 years later in 1992.[7] An Arkansas marriage certificate showing that G~ and the NH married in a solemnized
                  marriage ceremony in Arkansas on May XX, 1978. But because the NH was not divorced
                  from his first wife R~ (who was still living at the time) until 1992, the 1978 marriage
                  between G~ and the NH was not valid and was void under Arkansas law. See Ark. Code Ann. § 9-12-101; Acuna, 765 F.Supp. at 513 (finding a subsequent marriage before dissolution of the prior
                  marriage is void).
               
               Given that G~’s marriage to the NH was void, the lack of a divorce decree showing
                  that G~ and the NH were divorced is not determinative. See Smiley, 448 S.W. 2d at 642 (a ceremonial marriage to a person who has previously been married
                  and has never obtained a divorce is void from its inception and no court decree is
                  required to declare it void); Bruno, 256 S.W.3d at 341; Goset v. Goset, 164 S.W. 759, 762 (Ark. 1914). Indeed, G~ advised the agency that she did not list
                  her marriage to the NH in a February 2015 disability application she had filed because
                  she did not think it was legal. She stated that after she married the NH, she found
                  out that he was still married to his previous wife, R~. The evidence includes an undated
                  statement by the NH in which the NH similarly stated that he did not divorce R~ before
                  he married G~. Furthermore, in 1988, G~ married another man in Arkansas and was married
                  to him until they divorced in 1996. Thus, if G~ did not believe her marriage to the
                  NH was legal, it follows that she never sought a divorce from the NH. Further, her
                  subsequent marriage to another man contradicts her present claim that she thought
                  she had a valid marriage to the NH.
               
               Accordingly, because G~’s marriage to the NH was void, G~ has not proven that she
                  was validly married to the NH under Arkansas law at the time of his death in 2001.
                  Therefore, she has not established her status as the NH’s widow under the Act. See 42 U.S.C. § 416(h)(1)(A)(i).[8]
               C. G~ Has Not Established a Deemed Valid Marriage to the NH under the Act, 42U.S.C. § 416(h)(1)(B)
                     
               Finally, we consider whether the agency will deem G~’s marriage to the NH valid under
                  section 216(h)(1)(B). See 42 U.S.C. § 416(h)(1)(B). If, under state law, an applicant is determined not to be a NH’s spouse, the agency
                  will nevertheless consider the claimant to be the NH’s surviving spouse if she went
                  through a marriage ceremony with the NH in good faith that would have resulted in
                  a valid marriage except for a legal impediment. See 42 U.S.C. § 416(h)(1)(B); 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.346(a), 404.727; POMS GN 00305.055. A legal impediment includes only an impediment that results because a previous marriage
                  had not ended at the time of the ceremony or because there was a defect in the procedure
                  followed in connection with the intended marriage. See 42 U.S.C. § 416(h)(1)(B)(iv); 20 C.F.R. § 404.346(a). “Good faith” means that at the
                  time of the ceremony, the applicant did not know that a legal impediment existed,
                  or if she did know, the applicant thought that it would not prevent a valid marriage.
                  See 20 C.F.R. § 404.346. To be entitled to benefits as a widow based on a deemed marriage,
                  the claimant and the insured must have been living in the same household at the time
                  the insured died. See 42 U.S.C § 416(h)(1)(B)(i); 20 C.F.R. §§ 404.346, 404.347.
               
               Here, G~ stated that she knew that the NH was married to R~ when he married G~ and
                  that she did not believe her marriage to the NH was a legal marriage, but she also
                  indicated that she learned about this after her marriage ceremony. Thus, there is
                  some evidence to support a finding that she met the good faith requirement. See 20 C.F.R. § 404.346. Regardless, because the evidence indicates that G~ and the NH
                  were not living in the same household when he died in 2001, the agency will not deem
                  their marriage valid. See id.
               
               CONCLUSION
               We conclude that the marriage between the G~ and the NH was void due to the NH’s prior
                  undissolved marriage to R~. As such, because G~ was not validly married to the NH
                  at the time of his death in 2001 under Arkansas law, she is not the NH’s surviving
                  spouse, or widow, under the Act for purposes of widow’s benefits.
               
               Michael McGaughran
               Regional Chief Counsel
               By: ________________________
               Una McGeehan
               Assistant Regional Counsel