In re: Peacock , 248 N.C. App. 18 ( 2016 )


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  •                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA15-1238
    Filed: 21 June 2016
    New Hanover County, No. 14 E 483
    IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF RICHARD DIXON PEACOCK
    Date of Death: 12/19/2013
    Appeal by Bernadine Peacock from order entered by Judge Ebern T. Watson,
    III in Superior Court, New Hanover County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 11 April
    2016.
    Law Offices of G. Grady Richardson, Jr., P.C., by G. Grady Richardson, Jr., for
    Appellee.
    Johnson Lambeth & Brown, by Regan H. Rozier, for Appellant.
    McGEE, Chief Judge.
    I.
    Richard Dixon Peacock (“Decedent”) and Bernadine Peacock (“Petitioner”)
    were married 1 August 1993. Decedent had two children by a prior marriage, Rachel
    Peacock Ceci (“Rachel”) and Richard Eric Peacock (“Eric”). Decedent and Petitioner
    had three children: two living at the time of this action, Richard Peacock II
    (“Richard”) and Kristen Alicia Peacock (“Kristen”); and Jonathan Peacock, deceased
    and without heirs. Decedent and Petitioner divorced in 2007. The uncontested
    testimony is that Decedent and Petitioner reconciled, and Petitioner moved back into
    Decedent’s house in July 2012. They attended church “every Sunday with Richard,
    IN RE PEACOCK
    Opinion of the Court
    and established a relationship with their pastor, Reverend Dena Bearl (“Reverend
    Bearl”). Reverend Bearl first assumed Decedent and Petitioner were married, but
    they informed her they had divorced and reconciled, and that they intended to re-
    marry, but “never made a solid date.” According to Reverend Bearl, Decedent and
    Petitioner “just said they wanted to do it, and I said, you know, give me a call and
    we’ll get together and discuss it. And, you know, just he got ill and we – they just –
    we never had that meeting that they wanted to have.”
    Decedent had chronic medical issues, and Petitioner cared for him. Decedent
    became ill on 16 November 2013, and required hospitalization. Decedent was twice
    transferred from the hospital to a rehabilitation facility before returning to the
    hospital on 14 December 2013. Decedent and Petitioner discussed marriage while
    Decedent was hospitalized, and decided to marry while Decedent was still in the
    hospital. Petitioner asked their friend, Mary Bridges “to be . . . her ‘maid of honor’ as
    a witness and [Petitioner’s] son, Richard, as a best man [and the second witness].”
    Reverend Bearl visited Decedent in the hospital about every other day, and she
    agreed to officiate the wedding ceremony at Decedent’s and Petitioner’s request.
    Reverend Bearl testified she had been ordained for twenty-two years, had performed
    many wedding ceremonies in her capacity as a pastor, and was fully authorized by
    her church to do so. Reverend Bearl testified she performed the regular ceremony
    that she performs for weddings, though certain parts were shortened. Reverend
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    Bearl testified both Decedent and Petitioner affirmed: “In the name of God, I take you
    to be my wife[/husband], to have and to hold from this day forward, for better, for
    worse, richer or poorer, in sickness, in health, to love and to cherish until death[.]”
    Reverend Bearl then “pronounce[d] [Decedent and Petitioner] husband and wife[,]”
    and performed “the blessing of the marriage” which, Reverend Bearl testified, “for us
    [her church] is very important.”
    However, because Decedent and Petitioner had not procured a marriage
    license, Reverend Bearl testified:
    It was my intent to provide what I thought was for Richard
    in the last days of his life some closure to something that
    he felt and regretted had not been done. So, it was a
    pastoral act on my part. I knew there wasn’t a wedding
    license. I wasn’t in there as a representative of the state,
    which clergy are, you know, when they’re doing marriages
    and have the license present. So, I mean, we all knew that
    there was not a wedding, a marriage license. So, this was
    a pastoral and a sacramental – I would say for me it was
    mainly a sacramental act, a sacrament that they wanted to
    know that they had.
    Q. When you left the room, did you feel that they were now
    husband and wife?
    A. I felt that they felt that they were, that they had taken
    the vows seriously.
    ....
    Q. Did you discuss with them whether they – you could
    legally marry them?
    A. I – well, I told them that it would not be a legal marriage
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    Opinion of the Court
    if we didn’t have a license, and they did not have a license.
    But I believe the sacrament took place, and that was what
    was important to them.
    Petitioner testified that she did not attempt to obtain a marriage license
    because Decedent was too ill to travel to the register of deeds, and that “we didn’t
    really think about a marriage license, we just were happy to finally get married.”
    Decedent died intestate on 19 December 2013, the day following the ceremony.
    Rachel filed an application for letters of administration on 17 April 2014, in which
    she listed four known heirs: herself, Eric, Richard and Kristen. Petitioner filed a
    motion for determination of heirs dated 16 October 2014, contending she was the
    spouse of Decedent when he died and, therefore, she should be included as an heir of
    Decedent’s estate. This matter was initially heard by an Assistant Clerk of Court of
    New Hanover County on 11 December 2014. The Assistant Clerk of Court concluded
    that the 18 December 2013 ceremony did “not make [Petitioner] an ‘heir’ or entitle
    [Petitioner] to a spousal allowance or the share of the surviving spouse or any other
    interest in or from the Decedent’s Estate.” The Assistant Clerk of Court ruled that
    Decedent’s heirs were Rachel, Eric, Richard, and Kristen.
    Petitioner appealed the decision to superior court. Petitioner’s appeal was
    heard on 7 May 2015, and additional testimony was permitted. The trial court, in an
    order entered 26 May 2015, made its own findings of fact and conclusions of law, and
    affirmed the Assistant Clerk of Court’s decision. Petitioner appeals.
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    Opinion of the Court
    II.
    Appellate review of orders of clerks of court is as follows:
    On appeal to the Superior Court of an order of the Clerk in
    matters of probate, the trial court judge sits as an appellate
    court. When the order or judgment appealed from does
    contain specific findings of fact or conclusions to which an
    appropriate exception has been taken, the role of the trial
    judge on appeal is to apply the whole record test. In doing
    so, the trial judge reviews the Clerk’s findings and may
    either affirm, reverse, or modify them. If there is evidence
    to support the findings of the Clerk, the judge must affirm.
    . . . . The standard of review in this Court is the same as in
    the Superior Court.
    In re Estate of Pate, 
    119 N.C. App. 400
    , 402-03, 
    459 S.E.2d 1
    , 2-3 (1995) (quotations
    and citations omitted). “Errors of law are reviewed de novo.” Overton v. Camden Cty.,
    
    155 N.C. App. 391
    , 393, 
    574 S.E.2d 157
    , 160 (2002) (citation omitted). Though
    Petitioner argues that certain findings of fact were not supported by the evidence, we
    have thoroughly reviewed the findings of fact and hold that the relevant findings of
    fact are supported by the evidence. We therefore review the relevant conclusions of
    law, and the trial court’s ruling, de novo for errors of law. 
    Id. III. Petitioner
    argues that the “[trial] court’s judgment is inconsistent with the
    applicable law.” We agree.
    The rulings of the Assistant Clerk of Court and the trial court are based upon
    conclusions that the ceremony conducted on 18 December 2013 did not result in a
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    Opinion of the Court
    valid marriage. The “Requisites of marriage” are set forth, in relevant part, in N.C.
    Gen. Stat. § 51-1 as follows:
    A valid and sufficient marriage is created by the consent of
    a male and female person1 who may lawfully marry,
    presently to take each other as husband and wife, freely,
    seriously and plainly expressed by each in the presence of
    the other, either:
    (1) a. In the presence of an ordained minister of any
    religious denomination, a minister authorized by a
    church, or a magistrate; and
    b. With the consequent declaration by the minister
    or magistrate that the persons are husband and
    wife[.]
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-1 (2015). In the present case, it is undisputed that Decedent and
    Petitioner were able to lawfully marry at the time of the ceremony; that they seriously
    and freely expressed their desire to become husband and wife in the presence of each
    other; that Reverend Bearl was an ordained minister with authority to conduct
    marriage ceremonies; and that Reverend Bearl declared during the ceremony that
    Decedent and Petitioner were husband and wife.
    However, it is also undisputed that the ceremony was conducted without a
    marriage license as required by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-6, which states:
    No minister, officer, or any other person authorized to
    solemnize a marriage under the laws of this State shall
    perform a ceremony of marriage between a man and
    1 This provision limiting the definition of a valid marriage to exclude same-sex couples has
    been held violative of the United States Constitution. Fisher-Borne v. Smith, 
    14 F. Supp. 3d 695
    , 698
    (M.D.N.C. 2014), appeal dismissed, (4th Cir. 2015).
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    Opinion of the Court
    woman, or shall declare them to be husband and wife, until
    there is delivered to that person a license for the marriage
    of the said persons, signed by the register of deeds of the
    county in which the marriage license was issued or by a
    lawful deputy or assistant.
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-6 (2015). Violation of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-6 by a minister or
    other authorized person is a misdemeanor, and is punishable by a fine:
    Every minister, officer, or any other person authorized to
    solemnize a marriage under the laws of this State, who
    marries any couple without a license being first delivered
    to that person, as required by law, or after the expiration
    of such license, or who fails to return such license to the
    register of deeds within 10 days after any marriage
    celebrated by virtue thereof, with the certificate appended
    thereto duly filled up and signed, shall forfeit and pay two
    hundred dollars ($200.00) to any person who sues
    therefore, and shall also be guilty of a Class 1
    misdemeanor.
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-7 (2015).
    Our Supreme Court has discussed the consequences of violating the license
    requirement in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-6:
    C.S., 2498,2 emphasizes the requirement that the license
    must be first delivered to the officer before the
    solemnization of the marriage:
    “No minister or officer shall perform a ceremony of
    marriage between any two persons, or shall declare
    them to be man and wife, until there is delivered to him
    a license for the marriage of the said persons, signed by
    the register of deeds of the county in which the marriage
    is intended to take place, or by his lawful deputy.”
    2   C.S. § 2498 was the precursor to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-6.
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    Opinion of the Court
    It is true that the marriage is not invalid because
    solemnized without a marriage license; Maggett v. Roberts,
    
    112 N.C. 71
    , 
    16 S.E. 919
    ; State v. Parker, 
    106 N.C. 711
    , 
    11 S.E. 517
    ; State v. Robbins, 
    28 N.C. 23
    , [44 Am. Dec. 64], —
    or under an illegal license; Maggett v. 
    Roberts, supra
    — but
    it is clear that both these sections of the statute require
    that the license shall be first delivered to the officer before
    the marriage is solemnized, else under the latter statute he
    is liable to the penalty sued for in this action.
    Wooley v. Bruton, 
    184 N.C. 438
    , 440, 
    114 S.E. 628
    , 629 (1922). Wooley states the
    principal, well-established in North Carolina jurisprudence, that though violation of
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-6 might subject a person who officiates a wedding ceremony
    without first receiving a marriage license to prosecution, the lack of a valid license
    will not invalidate that ceremony, or the resulting marriage. 
    Wooley, 184 N.C. at 440
    ,
    114 S.E. at 629; see also Sawyer v. Slack, 
    196 N.C. 697
    , 700, 
    146 S.E. 864
    , 865 (1929)
    (citation omitted) (“It has, however, been uniformly held by this Court that a
    marriage, without a license as required by statute, is valid.”); Maggett v. Roberts, 
    112 N.C. 71
    , 74, 
    16 S.E. 919
    , 920 (1893) (citations omitted) (“The marriage under an
    invalid license, or with no license, as has been repeatedly held, would be good, if valid
    in other respects. The only effect of marrying a couple without a legal license is to
    subject the officer or minister to the penalty of $200, prescribed by The Code[.]”); State
    v. Robbins, 
    28 N.C. 23
    , 25 (1845) (“The law of this State . . . authorizes and empowers
    the clerks of the several county courts to grant marriage licenses, upon the applicant’s
    giving bond and security agreeably to its provisions; but if a marriage is solemnized
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    Opinion of the Court
    by a minister of the gospel or a magistrate, without a license, though he may subject
    himself to a penalty, the marriage is, notwithstanding, good to every intent and
    purpose.”).
    Therefore, in order to show a valid marriage,
    [N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-1] require[s] the parties to “express
    their solemn intent to marry in the presence of (1) an
    ordained minister of any religious denomination, or (2) a
    minister authorized by his church or (3) a magistrate.”
    Our Supreme Court has stated: “[u]pon proof that a
    marriage ceremony took place, it will be presumed that it
    was legally performed and resulted in a valid marriage.”
    The burden of proof rests upon plaintiff to prove by the
    greater weight of the evidence grounds to void or annul the
    marriage to overcome the presumption of a valid marriage.
    Pickard v. Pickard, 
    176 N.C. App. 193
    , 196, 
    625 S.E.2d 869
    , 872 (2006) (citations
    omitted). A marriage performed in full accordance with N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-1, but
    lacking the license required by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-6, is valid, and neither void nor
    voidable. 
    Sawyer, 196 N.C. at 700
    , 146 S.E. at 865. This Court must follow the law
    as written, and follow the precedents set by prior decisions. It is the sole province of
    the General Assembly to amend the laws to make a marriage license a pre-requisite
    to a valid marriage.
    In the present case, the trial court made the following relevant findings of fact:
    13. On or about December 18, 2013, . . . Reverend Dena
    Bearl, Rector of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church in Wilmington,
    North Carolina, conducted a ceremony at the hospital
    involving Decedent and [Petitioner]. Reverend Bearl
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    Opinion of the Court
    performed the “Celebration and Blessing of a Marriage” . . .
    from the Episcopal Book of Common Prayer, which is used
    in the Episcopal Church to perform marriage ceremonies.
    However, Reverend Bearl considered this a “religious
    wedding,” and did not intend for this ceremony to be a
    “legal wedding.”
    14. Reverend Bearl informed the Decedent and [Petitioner]
    at the time of the December 18, 2013 ceremony that a
    marriage license was required for a legal marriage and that
    the ceremony she was performing did not constitute a legal
    marriage.
    ....
    21. “[Petitioner] intended to participate in the December
    18, 2013 ceremony without a marriage license, despite
    knowing that she needed a marriage license to be married
    to the Decedent.”
    Based in part on these findings, the trial court concluded the following:
    1. There is insufficient evidence to show that the Petitioner
    and Decedent attempted to comply, intended to comply, or
    were unable to comply with North Carolina law requiring
    a marriage license for a valid, legal marriage.
    2. The ceremony performed by Reverend Bearl at the
    hospital on December 18, 2013, with the Decedent and
    [Petitioner] was a religious ceremony and not a legal
    marriage.
    3. The heirs of Decedent . . . are Rachel Peacock Ceci,
    Richard Eric Peacock, Richard Dixon Peacock, II, and
    Kristen Alicia Peacock.
    Petitioner argues that our Supreme Court’s opinion in Mussa v. Palmer-Mussa,
    
    366 N.C. 185
    , 
    731 S.E.2d 404
    (2012), supports the rulings of the Assistant Clerk of
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    Opinion of the Court
    Court and the trial court in this matter. We disagree. In Mussa, the defendant (“the
    wife”) was married in November 1997 to the plaintiff (“the husband”). 
    Id. at 185,
    731
    S.E.2d at 405. The husband sought to have the marriage annulled, arguing that the
    wife had been married earlier to another man (“Braswell”), who was still living, and
    that the wife and Braswell had never divorced. 
    Id. at 186-87,
    731 S.E.2d at 406. The
    person who officiated the Islamic marriage ceremony was a friend of Braswell’s
    named Kareem, about whom little was known. 
    Id. at 187-88,
    731 S.E.2d at 406.
    Kareem could not be located, and there was no evidence that he was a person
    authorized to conduct marriage ceremonies pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-1. 
    Id. at 189,
    731 S.E.2d at 407. The husband argued that his marriage to the wife was
    bigamous and therefore void. 
    Id. at 186-87,
    719 S.E.2d at 406. The trial court in
    Mussa found, and our Supreme Court noted, that no marriage license had been
    obtained for the ceremony performed by Kareem “because they only intended to
    establish a religious union.” 
    Id. at 187,
    719 S.E.2d at 406. Our Supreme Court held
    the following:
    As the attacking party, [the husband] then had the burden
    to demonstrate that his marriage to defendant was
    bigamous. But based upon the evidence presented at trial,
    the district court concluded that [the wife] and Braswell
    never were married because Kareem was not authorized to
    perform marriage ceremonies pursuant to the version of
    section 51–1 that was in effect in 1997. As we have stated
    previously, the prior version of section 51–1 required
    parties participating in a marriage ceremony to “express
    their solemn intent to marry in the presence of (1) ‘an
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    Opinion of the Court
    ordained minister of any religious denomination,’ or (2) a
    ‘minister authorized by his church’ or (3) a ‘magistrate.’”
    The district court made several uncontested findings of fact
    regarding Kareem’s qualifications to conduct marriages.
    Most notably, the court found that “[t]here was insufficient
    evidence presented for [it] to find that Kareem had the
    status of either ‘an ordained minister’ or a ‘minister
    authorized by his church’ . . . . There was no evidence
    presented that Kareem was a magistrate.” The court also
    found that “[t]here was no evidence presented about
    Kareem’s authorization or qualification to perform the
    ceremony.” These uncontested findings are binding, but we
    also observe that according to [the wife’s] testimony,
    Kareem was an out-of-state friend of Braswell’s whose
    primary occupation was construction – he was not an
    imam. Additionally, in finding of fact fifteen, the court
    noted that [the wife] and Braswell did not “obtain[ ] a
    marriage license prior to the ceremony.” Based upon these
    findings, the court concluded that: “Because no marriage
    license was obtained by or issued to Defendant and Khalil
    Braswell, and there is insufficient evidence that the
    marriage ceremony met the requirements for a valid
    marriage, the Court cannot find that Defendant married
    Mr. Braswell as contemplated by the statute.” The district
    court also concluded that plaintiff “failed to meet his
    burden in establishing that his marriage was bigamous”
    because he had not shown that [the wife] “was previously
    legally married.”
    In sum, we are bound by the district court’s uncontested
    finding that Kareem was not authorized to perform
    marriage ceremonies in North Carolina. From this finding
    it follows that [the husband] failed to show that his
    marriage to [the wife] was bigamous because he could not
    demonstrate that [the wife] married Braswell during a
    marriage ceremony that met the requirements of section
    51–1.
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    Opinion of the Court
    
    Id. at 194,
    731 S.E.2dat 410-11 (citations omitted) (emphasis added). Though our
    Supreme Court mentions the finding of fact by the trial court that no marriage license
    was procured for the ceremony conducted by Kareem, it bases its holding that the
    husband had failed to prove the earlier marriage was valid on the husband’s failure
    to demonstrate that the ceremony had complied with the requirements of N.C. Gen.
    Stat. § 51-1 – specifically that the husband could not prove that Kareem was a person
    authorized to perform a marriage ceremony. 
    Id. N.C. Gen.
    Stat. § 51-6 is not
    mentioned in this holding, and there is nothing in Mussa indicating that our Supreme
    Court has overruled Wooley, Sawyer, Robbins, or other opinions which hold that the
    absence of a valid marriage license will not invalidate a marriage performed in
    accordance with the requirements of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-1. Further, there is nothing
    in Mussa indicating that our Supreme Court was concerned that the ceremony had
    “only [been] intended to establish a religious union.” 
    Id. at 187,
    719 S.E.2d at 406.
    The holding in Mussa is based on the husband’s failure to prove that Kareem was a
    person authorized to conduct a marriage ceremony pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-
    1.
    As we have held above, the fact that the ceremony in the present case was
    conducted without a license could not serve to invalidate an otherwise properly
    performed ceremony and resulting marriage. There is no dispute that the ceremony
    was conducted in the presence of a minister authorized to perform marriages, and
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    Opinion of the Court
    that that minister, Reverend Bearl, declared that Decedent and Petitioner were
    husband and wife. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-1(1). There is no dispute that Decedent
    and Petitioner could lawfully marry at the time the ceremony was conducted, and
    that they stated at the ceremony that they would take each other as “husband and
    wife freely, seriously and plainly expressed by each in the presence of the other[.]”
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-1.    The only remaining question is whether Decedent and
    Petitioner “consented” to take each other as “husband and wife,” as contemplated by
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-1. Stated differently, if Decedent and Petitioner believed the
    ceremony to have been a religious ceremony only, and not a legal ceremony, could
    they be found to have “consented” as required by N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-1.
    We note, based upon a plain reading of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-1, that the intent
    of the person performing the ceremony is not a relevant factor in determining
    whether a valid marriage has resulted. Therefore, Reverend Bearl’s intent to perform
    a “religious ceremony” but not a “legal ceremony” does not affect the outcome in the
    present case. Further, there is nothing in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 51-1 requiring that a
    valid marriage ceremony is contingent upon the persons being married
    understanding or agreeing with all the legal consequences of that marriage. They
    must only be free to “lawfully marry,” and “consent . . . presently to take each other
    as husband and wife, freely, seriously and plainly expressed by each in the presence
    of the other[.]” 
    Id. It is
    uncontested that Decedent and Petitioner reconciled after
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    Opinion of the Court
    their divorce, that Petitioner moved back in with Decedent, that they functioned as a
    family with Richard, and that they both discussed their desire to remarry with
    Reverend Bearl. Simply put, there was no evidence presented that the ceremony
    conducted by Reverend Bearl on 18 December 2013 failed to comply with N.C. Gen.
    Stat. § 51-1. Because the 18 December 2013 ceremony complied with N.C. Gen. Stat.
    § 51-1, and because our Supreme Court has repeatedly held that a marriage license
    is not a prerequisite to a valid marriage, we hold that Decedent and Petitioner were
    married on 18 December 2013. This marriage included all the attendant rights and
    obligations.
    IV.
    As Kristen notes in the fact section of her brief, Petitioner testified at trial that
    she would renounce her rights to inherit from Decedent’s estate. Kristen’s trial
    attorney requested that the trial court rule that Petitioner had renounced her rights
    to inherit in the event the trial court decided that the ceremony resulted in a valid
    marriage. Because the trial court ruled there was no valid marriage, it did not
    address the issue of renunciation. Although Kristen, in her brief, notes Petitioner’s
    testimony, Kristen does not argue in her brief that Petitioner’s alleged renunciation
    constituted “an alternate basis in law for supporting the order[.]” N.C.R. App. P. Rule
    10(c). This issue is therefore not before us. See City of Asheville v. State, __ N.C. App.
    __, __, 
    777 S.E.2d 92
    , 102-03, (2015), review allowed, writ allowed, __ N.C. __, 781
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    Opinion of the Court
    S.E.2d 476 (2016); Maldjian v. Bloomquist, __ N.C. App. __, __, 
    782 S.E.2d 80
    , 85
    (2016).
    We reverse the trial court’s order affirming the decision of the Assistant Clerk
    of Court, and remand to the trial court for remand to the New Hanover County Clerk
    of Superior Court with instruction to acknowledge the validity of the 18 December
    2013 marriage of Decedent and Petitioner, and take further action regarding
    Decedent’s estate consistent with Petitioner’s status as Decedent’s spouse at the time
    of his death.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    Judges STEPHENS and DAVIS concur.
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