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AlFas | 12:53 Tue 12th Jul 2005 | Body & Soul
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Probably the wrong catagory, but anyway;
Has anybody been to a wedding where somebody has spoken up after the line "does anybody know of any legal impediment why these people should not be married"?
If so, what happens next, assuming it's genuine and not just somebody trying to be funny?

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The wedding must be postponed while an investigation takes place. In the case of an obviously silly one, the officiating person(s) can take a view to proceed with the agreement of the couple. In the case of a more serious accusation (bigamy, for example) the investigation will be more in depth.

It's one of the reasons why people take out wedding insurance as it protects you in the event of a false accusation.

Wish someone had said that line at my 1st wedding!
At my wedding, my mate's little one gave a little 'goo-goo ga-ga' after this question. Not quite what you were hoping, but I still bricked it! I was expecting perfect silence.
There was only 2 people at our wedding and they both got warned beforehand :)
O'Bonio, that cracked me up.

i'm the same as you there boo!

anyone does it at my 2nd wedding, the right one (lol) i will kill them!

If your worried about it,  get the vicar or priest to ommit this line from the speach.  I have complete and utter bum holes in my family, and was warned before hand that something would happen and so i nipped it in the bud before anyone got any ideas!  Good Luck!

Thankfully, I haven't had this happening at any wedding that I have officiated at - apart from the occasional coughs, titters and one one occasion a duck quacking several times just as the question was asked. The wedding was on a boat and the ducks just happened to be swimming past (or that was their story) :)

I can only speak for wedding legislation in Scotland but I think it probably applies in England too. The question asked about legal objections is just a formality really and not really necessary, as members of the public have been given due time to raise any objections with the registrar in the days running up to the wedding. A notice of marriage is posted by the registrar (usually 15 days before the wedding) and people have the opportunity during that time to raise any objections. There are only a few valid legal objections that can be made and they must be substantiated with proper evidence. I don't have my file with info about this to hand but these objections include bigamy and polygamy. It is (or was - not sure if this has changed since I moved overseas) also a problem for someone who has had as sex change to marry as they have to produce their birth certificate when they register the marriage and the sex registered on their birth certificate is the one they have to legally marry with. Perhaps the law has changed on this.

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Thanks all.
Just to clarify, I'm not getting married, I just wondered if it ever actually happens, or if it's just one of those things that only occur in films.

I know someone that attended a wedding and just after that line a woman started crying and screaming "he's mine!" she was removed from the church...not just in them movies then!
-- answer removed --
I was really hoping someone had!!

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