In re Marriage of LaFleur & Pyfer , 2021 CO 3 ( 2021 )


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    ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE
    January 11, 2021
    
    2021 CO 3
    No. 19SC1004, In re Marriage of LaFleur & Pyfer—Common Law Marriage—
    Void Ab Initio—Retroactivity.
    The supreme court reviews whether a common law same-sex marriage
    entered in Colorado may be recognized as predating Colorado’s recognition of
    formal same-sex marriages. The court holds that state law restrictions on same-
    sex marriage deemed unconstitutional in Obergefell v. Hodges, 
    576 U.S. 664
    (2015),
    cannot serve as an impediment to the recognition of a same-sex marriage
    predating that decision. The court therefore affirms the district court’s conclusion
    that the parties here were not, as a matter of law, barred from entering into a
    common law marriage. The court also affirms the district court’s determination
    that the parties in fact entered into a common law marriage in 2003. The court
    reverses the district court’s division of property and award of spousal
    maintenance, however, and remands with instructions to make further findings in
    accordance with sections 14-10-113 and -114, C.R.S. (2020).
    The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
    2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203
    
    2021 CO 3
    Supreme Court Case No. 19SC1004
    C.A.R. 50 Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals
    Court of Appeals Case No. 18CA2252
    Jefferson County District Court Case No. 18DR30057
    Honorable Margie L. Enquist, Judge
    In re the Marriage of
    Petitioner:
    Dean LaFleur,
    v.
    Respondent:
    Timothy Pyfer.
    Judgment Affirmed in Part and Reversed in Part
    en banc
    January 11, 2021
    Attorneys for Petitioner:
    Antolinez Miller, LLC
    Joseph H. Antolinez
    Melissa E. Miller
    Centennial, Colorado
    Azizpour Donnelly, LLC
    Katayoun A. Donnelly
    Denver, Colorado
    Attorneys for Respondent:
    Law Offices of Rodger C. Daley
    Rodger C. Daley
    Carrie Vonachen
    Dorian Geisler
    Denver, Colorado
    Reilly LLP
    John M. McHugh
    Denver, Colorado
    Attorneys for Amici Curiae the Colorado LGBT Bar Association; the Colorado
    Women’s Bar Association; Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund, Inc.;
    and the National Center for Lesbian Rights:
    Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund, Inc.
    Shelly L. Skeen
    Dallas, Texas
    Hogan Lovells US LLP
    Mark D. Gibson
    Denver, Colorado
    JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    CHIEF JUSTICE BOATRIGHT concurs in part and concurs in the judgment.
    JUSTICE SAMOUR dissents.
    2
    ¶1    In 2018, Respondent Timothy Pyfer filed a dissolution of marriage petition,
    alleging that he had entered into a common law marriage with his same-sex
    partner, Petitioner Dean LaFleur, when they held a ceremony before family and
    friends on November 30, 2003, and exchanged vows and rings. LaFleur countered
    that Pyfer’s claim was legally impossible because at the time of the 2003 ceremony,
    Colorado did not recognize same-sex marriages. In the interim, however, the U.S.
    Supreme Court held that same-sex couples may exercise the fundamental right to
    marry and struck down state laws that excluded same-sex couples from civil
    marriage as unconstitutional. Obergefell v. Hodges, 
    576 U.S. 644
    , 674–75 (2015). We
    accepted jurisdiction over this case under C.A.R. 50 to address whether, in light of
    Obergefell, a same-sex couple may prove a common law marriage entered in
    Colorado before the state recognized same-sex couples’ fundamental right to
    marry.
    ¶2    This case is one of three we announce today addressing common law
    marriage in Colorado. See In re Marriage of Hogsett & Neale, 
    2021 CO 1
    , __ P.3d __;
    In re Estate of Yudkin, 
    2021 CO 2
    , __ P.3d __. In Hogsett, we refine the test for
    establishing a common law marriage first articulated in People v. Lucero, 
    747 P.2d 660
    (Colo. 1987), to reflect changed circumstances since that decision, including
    the recognition of same-sex marriage. Like this case, Hogsett involves a same-sex
    relationship predating Obergefell. But this case raises a threshold question that no
    3
    party contested in Hogsett: whether a same-sex couple may be deemed to have
    entered into a common law marriage pre-Obergefell.1
    ¶3    We hold that a court may recognize a common law same-sex marriage
    entered in Colorado before the state recognized same-sex couples’ fundamental
    right to marry. We reach this conclusion for two reasons.
    ¶4    First, as stated, Obergefell struck down state laws that excluded same-sex
    couples from civil marriage as 
    unconstitutional. 576 U.S. at 674
    –75. The general
    rule is that a statute that is declared unconstitutional is void ab initio; it is
    inoperative as if it had never been enacted. Consequently, state law restrictions
    held unconstitutional in Obergefell cannot serve as an impediment to the
    recognition of a same-sex marriage predating that decision. Indeed, recognition
    of a same-sex marriage is the remedy for a state’s earlier violation of the couple’s
    constitutional rights. Moreover, because Obergefell held that states must allow
    same-sex couples to enter marriages on the same terms and conditions as different-
    sex couples, and because Colorado recognizes common law marriages between
    1 As discussed in this opinion, infra ¶¶ 30–31, Colorado recognized same-sex
    marriage approximately eight months before Obergefell did so nationwide. We
    nevertheless use the phrase “pre-Obergefell” in this opinion as shorthand to refer
    generally to the time predating states’ (including Colorado’s) recognition of same-
    sex couples’ fundamental right to marry.
    4
    different-sex couples, it therefore must also recognize such marriages between
    same-sex couples—including those entered into pre-Obergefell. Of course, to be
    recognized as a bona fide common law marriage, the relationship must satisfy the
    updated test we articulate today in Hogsett. ¶ 49 (“[A] common law marriage may
    be established by the mutual consent or agreement of the couple to enter the legal
    and social institution of marriage, followed by conduct manifesting that mutual
    agreement. The key question is whether the parties mutually intended to enter a
    marital relationship—that is, to share a life together as spouses in a committed,
    intimate relationship of mutual support and mutual obligation.”).
    ¶5    Second, to the extent Obergefell did not merely recognize an existing
    fundamental right to marry but announced a new rule of federal law, we conclude
    that the decision applies retroactively to marriages (including common law
    marriages) predating that decision. Under the Court’s retroactivity jurisprudence
    in the civil law context, when the Supreme Court “applies a rule of federal law to
    the parties before it, that rule . . . 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 [the Court’s] announcement of the rule.” Harper v. Va. Dep’t
    of Tax’n, 
    509 U.S. 86
    , 97 (1993). Because the Obergefell Court applied its rule of
    federal law to the litigants before it, we conclude that the Court’s holding in
    5
    Obergefell that restrictions on same-sex marriages are unconstitutional must be
    given retroactive effect.
    ¶6    Accordingly, we agree with the district court that the parties here were not,
    as a matter of law, barred from entering into a common law marriage in 2003.
    Applying the refined test announced today in Hogsett for determining whether a
    couple has entered into a common law marriage, we uphold the district court’s
    determination that the parties entered into a common law marriage. However, we
    reverse the court’s division of property and award of spousal maintenance and
    remand for further findings in accordance with sections 14-10-113 and -114, C.R.S.
    (2020).
    I. Facts and Procedural History
    ¶7    On January 19, 2018, Timothy Pyfer filed a dissolution of marriage petition,
    alleging that he and his same-sex partner, Dean LaFleur, had entered into a
    common law marriage on November 30, 2003, when they held a ceremony.
    ¶8    LaFleur argued that, as a matter of law, the couple could not have entered
    into a common law marriage because “same sex marriages were not recognized or
    protected under Colorado law” at that time. LaFleur further argued that, as a
    matter of fact, he and Pyfer did not mutually agree to enter into a common law
    marriage, as required under the test articulated in Lucero.
    6
    ¶9    Following an evidentiary hearing during which the court heard testimony
    from the parties and several of their family members and friends, the district court
    held that Pyfer and LaFleur entered into a common law marriage on November
    30, 2003, the date of the ceremony.      The court acknowledged that same-sex
    marriage was not recognized in Colorado until at least 2014. It reasoned, however,
    that same-sex couples’ ability to marry was eventually “recognized as a
    fundamental right that could not be denied” and that this right was not “suddenly
    created” but “existed prior to 2014.” Thus, the court concluded, Pyfer and LaFleur
    could enter into a common law marriage before Colorado recognized same-sex
    couples’ right to marry.
    ¶10   The court acknowledged that it had to decide “whether one can exhibit the
    intent to be married [for purposes of establishing a common law marriage] when
    such a relationship is not cognizable under the law.” The court then weighed the
    evidence from the hearing to determine the parties’ intent to enter a marital
    relationship. It found that Pyfer proposed marriage to LaFleur and that Pyfer
    intended to be married. LaFleur accepted the proposal in front of Pyfer’s sister,
    and the parties later participated in a ceremony in which they exchanged vows
    and rings before family and friends. The court noted that this ceremony “certainly
    appear[ed] to be a wedding.” The court highlighted photographs in evidence
    showing that “[t]here were rings, tuxes, attendance [by friends and family], [a]
    7
    toast, vows, [and] a reverend,” and it observed that Pyfer and LaFleur signed a
    document titled “Certificate of Holy Union.” Moreover, after the ceremony, Pyfer
    “held himself out as married to family and friends” and listed LaFleur as his
    spouse on an HR form in 2016 and on a vehicle in 2017. LaFleur financially
    supported Pyfer and they cohabitated, sharing the same room until “the last
    couple of years” before the dissolution petition was filed.
    ¶11   LaFleur testified that he never intended to be married and would not have
    gone through with the ceremony had he thought it would be legally binding with
    respect to his assets. However, the court found that LaFleur knew that Pyfer was
    listing him as a spouse on documents and was telling his family and friends they
    were married, and there was no evidence that LaFleur ever confronted Pyfer about
    doing so.
    ¶12   The court acknowledged that neither Pyfer nor LaFleur “really wore their
    wedding rings”; that they “did not share bank accounts”; that LaFleur’s family
    “denied that the parties were married” and “minimized the impact of the
    ceremony”; and that LaFleur did not “tell his co-workers he was married,”
    although the court also heard testimony that LaFleur worked in an environment
    that was “not welcoming” of same-sex couples.
    ¶13   After weighing all of this evidence, the court ultimately found that, even if
    he “did not want all of the legal obligations that come with a marriage,” LaFleur
    8
    “acquiesced when he accepted [Pyfer’s marriage] proposal and went through with
    their ceremony” and “intended to be joined with [Pyfer] for the rest of his life” on
    the date of the ceremony. The court therefore concluded that Pyfer and LaFleur
    entered into a common law marriage on November 30, 2003.
    ¶14   The court then proceeded with the dissolution proceedings and entered a
    dissolution decree and permanent orders. The court awarded the entirety of the
    marital value of the home to LaFleur. It awarded $50,000 of LaFleur’s Roth IRA to
    Pyfer and ordered each party to pay the debts accrued in his name. The court
    acknowledged that the spousal maintenance guidelines provided for an award of
    $734 per month for seven and a half years. However, it deviated downward from
    the guidelines and ordered $700 per month for four years, reasoning that Pyfer
    “lived rent-free” with LaFleur and, toward the end of the relationship, was
    engaged in an extramarital affair.
    ¶15   Pyfer appealed, arguing that the division of property was inequitable and
    not supported by sufficient findings; that the maintenance award was an
    unjustified downward deviation from the guidelines; and that both rulings
    constituted abuses of discretion. LaFleur cross-appealed, challenging the court’s
    ruling that the parties had entered into a common law marriage.
    ¶16   After this court granted certiorari to review Hogsett and Yudkin, LaFleur
    petitioned this court under C.A.R. 50 to review this case along with the other two.
    9
    We accepted jurisdiction and directed the parties to focus their oral argument on
    the question of whether a common law same-sex marriage entered in Colorado
    may be recognized as predating Colorado’s recognition of formal same-sex
    marriages.
    II. Timeliness of Cross-Appeal
    ¶17   As a threshold matter, Pyfer challenges LaFleur’s notice of cross-appeal as
    untimely filed and asserts that this court has no jurisdiction to consider the
    question LaFleur raises regarding the retroactive effect of Obergefell. Pyfer argues
    that the district court issued a final judgment concerning the existence of a
    common law marriage on July 31, 2018, and that under C.A.R. 4(a), LaFleur had
    forty-nine days from the entry of that judgment to file a notice of appeal.
    ¶18    We have previously characterized a final judgment for purposes of an
    appeal “as one that ends the particular action in which it is entered, leaving
    nothing further for the court pronouncing it to do in order to completely determine
    the rights of the parties involved in the proceedings.” People v. Guatney, 
    214 P.3d 1049
    , 1051 (Colo. 2009). Here, after entering the order concluding that Pyfer and
    LaFleur were common law married, the district court retained jurisdiction over the
    case and entered a decree of dissolution and permanent orders. The decree
    entered on October 15, 2018, was a final judgment ending the action. Pyfer filed
    his notice of appeal on November 30, 2018, which was within forty-nine days of
    10
    the entry of that order, and LaFleur filed his notice of cross-appeal fourteen days
    later. See C.A.R. 4(a) (“If a timely notice of appeal is filed by a party, any other
    party may file a notice of appeal within 14 days of the date on which the first notice
    of appeal is filed . . . .”). Accordingly, LaFleur’s cross-appeal was timely, and we
    may address his claim.
    III. Analysis
    ¶19   We begin by explaining the development of marriage laws in Colorado,
    detailing the history of race- and gender-based restrictions on marriage. We then
    address the question of whether a court may recognize a common law same-sex
    marriage entered in Colorado before Obergefell. Applying the general rule that an
    unconstitutional statute is void ab initio, we conclude that state law restrictions on
    same-sex marriage cannot serve as an impediment to the recognition of a same-
    sex marriage predating Obergefell. Moreover, we conclude that, under Harper,
    Obergefell   applies   retroactively   to    marriages—including      common      law
    marriages—predating that decision.
    ¶20   Having concluded that Pyfer and LaFleur were not, as a matter of law,
    barred from entering into a common law marriage, we apply the refined
    framework announced in Hogsett and conclude that the parties did in fact enter
    into a common law marriage. Finally, we review the division of property and
    award of spousal maintenance and determine that the district court abused its
    11
    discretion in failing to follow the proper procedure or make appropriate findings
    as required by sections 14-10-113 and -114.
    A. Development of Marriage Laws in Colorado
    ¶21   Colorado is one of a minority of states that still recognizes common law
    marriages. As early as 1897, the court of appeals explained that “in this state[,] a
    marriage simply by agreement of the parties, followed by cohabitation as husband
    and wife, . . . may be valid and binding.” Taylor v. Taylor, 
    50 P. 1049
    , 1049 (Colo.
    App. 1897).
    ¶22   As with statutory marriage, Colorado historically imposed restrictions on
    common law marriage that were later deemed to be unconstitutional. Until the
    mid-twentieth century, for example, common law marriage in Colorado was
    subject to anti-miscegenation laws. In Jackson v. City & County of Denver, 
    124 P.2d 240
    , 241 (Colo. 1942), an interracial couple who “liv[ed] together as though
    married” were convicted of vagrancy, which was defined under the Denver
    municipal code as “lead[ing] an . . . immoral . . . course of life.” (Omissions in
    original.) The couple challenged their convictions, arguing on appeal that they
    were not vagrants because they had entered into a common law marriage.
    Id. This court rejected
    that argument, relying on a statute that had been in force from
    Colorado’s territorial days providing that “[a]ll marriages between negroes or
    mulattoes, of either sex, and white persons, are . . . absolutely void.”
    Id. We 12 reasoned
    that the “defendants could not, either ceremonially or by common law, be
    married,” and therefore “they were, if living together, leading ‘an immoral course
    of life.’”
    Id. (emphasis added).2 ¶23
      Fifteen years later, in 1957, the Colorado legislature repealed the statute
    imposing racial restrictions on ceremonial and common law marriage. Ch. 124,
    sec. 1, § 90-1-2, 1957 Colo. Sess. Laws 334, 334. And in Loving v. Virginia, 
    388 U.S. 1
    (1967), the U.S. Supreme Court deemed such anti-miscegenation laws
    unconstitutional. There, the Court held that “[m]arriage is one of the ‘basic civil
    rights of man,’ fundamental to our very existence and survival,”
    id. at 12
    (quoting
    Skinner v. Oklahoma ex rel. Williamson, 
    316 U.S. 535
    , 541 (1942)), and that “[t]here
    can be no doubt that restricting the freedom to marry solely because of racial
    classifications violates the central meaning of the Equal Protection Clause,”
    id. ¶24
      Although this court was never asked to determine whether Loving applied
    to marriages predating that decision, courts presented with the issue either
    expressly held that the ruling applied retroactively to both ceremonial and
    2 Though the couple challenged the statute on equal protection grounds, we
    rejected their argument. 
    Jackson, 124 P.2d at 241
    (concluding that the statute did
    not discriminate on the basis of race because “[t]he statute applies to both white
    and black” persons). Today, we disavow our decision in Jackson and our failure in
    that case to recognize the racism animating Colorado’s anti-miscegenation statute.
    13
    common law marriage, or assumed as much. See, e.g., Dick v. Reaves, 
    434 P.2d 295
    ,
    298 (Okla. 1967) (holding that, in accordance with the U.S. Supreme Court’s “clear
    mandate” in Loving, Oklahoma’s anti-miscegenation laws violated equal
    protection and due process, and an interracial couple’s 1939 marriage was
    therefore valid); see also Prudential Ins. Co. of Am. v. Lewis, 
    306 F. Supp. 1177
    ,
    1183–84 (N.D. Ala. 1969) (holding that an interracial couple could validly enter
    into a common law marriage where one spouse died prior to the decision in
    Loving); Vetrano v. Gardner, 
    290 F. Supp. 200
    , 203–06 (N.D. Miss. 1968) (assuming,
    without expressly deciding, that Loving operated retroactively, but nonetheless
    finding that the interracial couple in that case did not enter into a common law
    marriage before Mississippi abolished common law marriage in 1956).
    ¶25   Just as interracial marriages were prohibited in Colorado, so too were
    marriages between same-sex couples, though that legal history is more recent. In
    the early 1970s, after the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled that a state statute
    restricting marriage to different-sex couples was constitutional, see Baker v. Nelson,
    
    191 N.W.2d 185
    , 187 (Minn. 1971), the U.S. Supreme Court dismissed the appeal
    of the case “for want of a substantial federal question,” Baker v. Nelson, 
    409 U.S. 810
    , 810 (1972) (mem.).
    ¶26   At that time, Colorado statutes did not expressly restrict marriage to
    different-sex couples, which led to a dispute about whether Colorado would
    14
    recognize marriages between same-sex couples. In 1975, three years after the
    Supreme Court dismissed Baker, Clela Rorex, the Boulder County Clerk, issued the
    nation’s first marriage license to a same-sex couple. County Clerk Changes History,
    PBS          Independent           Lens,          (June          14,         2015),
    https://www.pbs.org/independentlens/videos/county-clerk-changes-history/
    [https://perma.cc/9C7X-ZTRE]. The Boulder County District Attorney’s office
    advised Rorex that Colorado law did not require marriage licenses to be between
    a man and a woman, and she issued several marriage licenses to same-sex couples
    until the Colorado Attorney General’s office directed her to stop.
    Id. ¶27
      The issue of same-sex marriage re-emerged in 1993, when the Hawaii
    Supreme Court ruled that the state’s statutory ban on such marriages was
    presumed unconstitutional under Hawaii’s equal protection clause.          Baehr v.
    Lewin, 
    852 P.2d 44
    , 67–68 (Haw. 1993). The Baehr decision, which signaled the
    possibility that other jurisdictions might have to recognize same-sex marriages
    entered in Hawaii,3 prompted Congress to pass the Defense of Marriage Act, Pub.
    3 Ultimately, Hawaii voters approved an amendment to the state constitution
    empowering the legislature to “reserve marriage to opposite-sex couples.” Haw.
    Const. art. I, § 23. The Hawaii Supreme Court subsequently concluded that the
    state constitutional amendment rendered the challenge to the marriage statute
    moot. Baehr v. Miike, No. 91-1394-05, 
    1999 WL 35643448
    , at *1 (Haw. Dec. 9, 1999).
    15
    L. No. 104-199, 110 Stat. 2419 (“DOMA”). DOMA defined marriage as “a legal
    union between one man and one woman” for all federal purposes, 1 U.S.C. § 7,
    invalidated by United States v. Windsor, 
    570 U.S. 744
    , 775 (2013), and allowed states
    to refuse to give full faith and credit to same-sex marriages lawfully entered in
    other states, 28 U.S.C. § 1738C, rendered obsolete by 
    Obergefell, 576 U.S. at 674
    –75. In
    the years that followed, most states adopted statutes and state constitutional
    amendments both prohibiting same-sex marriage within state borders and barring
    recognition of same-sex marriages entered elsewhere. See Michael J. Klarman,
    From the Closet to the Altar: Courts, Backlash, and the Struggle for Same-Sex Marriage,
    at xi (2012) (“Within a decade [of Baehr], more than thirty-five states . . . passed
    laws to ‘defend’ traditional marriage.”). In 2000, Colorado similarly adopted a
    statute restricting marriage to “one man and one woman.” § 14-2-104(1)(b), C.R.S.
    (2000); see also
    id. -104(2)
    (providing that a marriage between two persons of the
    same sex shall not be recognized regardless of where contracted).
    ¶28   Then, in a groundbreaking ruling in 2003, the Massachusetts Supreme
    Judicial Court held that same-sex marriage bans were unconstitutional under that
    state’s constitution. Goodridge v. Dep’t of Pub. Health, 
    798 N.E.2d 941
    , 948 (Mass.
    2003) (“The question before us is whether, consistent with the Massachusetts
    Constitution, the Commonwealth may deny the protections, benefits, and
    obligations conferred by civil marriage to two individuals of the same sex who
    16
    wish to marry. We conclude that it may not.”). In the years after Goodridge, a
    handful of state supreme courts reached similar conclusions under their respective
    constitutions. See In re Marriage Cases, 
    183 P.3d 384
    (Cal. 2008), superseded by
    constitutional amendment, Cal. Const. art. I, § 7.5; Kerrigan v. Comm’r of Pub. Health,
    
    957 A.2d 407
    (Conn. 2008); Varnum v. Brien, 
    763 N.W.2d 862
    (Iowa 2009). In
    Colorado, by contrast, voters approved a 2006 constitutional amendment
    declaring that “[o]nly a union of one man and one woman shall be valid or
    recognized as a marriage in this state.” Colo. Const. art. II, § 31.
    ¶29   Although Colorado later passed legislation granting certain legal
    protections to same-sex couples through designated beneficiary agreements,
    § 15-22-102, C.R.S. (2009), and civil unions, § 14-15-102, C.R.S. (2013), these
    alternatives fell short of providing same-sex couples access to marriage on the
    same terms as different-sex couples.
    ¶30   In 2014, in companion cases from Utah and Oklahoma, the Tenth Circuit
    struck down those states’ same-sex marriage bans under the Fourteenth
    Amendment. Kitchen v. Herbert, 
    755 F.3d 1193
    , 1229–30 (10th Cir. 2014) (“[W]e
    hold that under the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the United States
    Constitution, those who wish to marry a person of the same sex are entitled to
    exercise the same fundamental right as is recognized for persons who wish to
    marry a person of the opposite sex, and that [Utah’s same-sex marriage bans] do
    17
    not withstand constitutional scrutiny.”); Bishop v. Smith, 
    760 F.3d 1070
    , 1082 (10th
    Cir. 2014) (“[Oklahoma] may not, consistent with the United States Constitution,
    prohibit same-sex marriages.”). Construing the Tenth Circuit’s rulings to mean
    that   Colorado’s    prohibitions   on    same-sex     marriage    were    likewise
    unconstitutional, a state and federal district court in Colorado each entered orders
    enjoining enforcement and application of those laws.         Burns v. Hickenlooper,
    No. 14-cv-01817-RM-KLM, 
    2014 WL 3634834
    , at *1 (D. Colo. July 23, 2014);
    Brinkman v. Long, Nos. 13-CV-32572, 14-CV-30731, 
    2014 WL 3408024
    , at *15–21
    (Colo. Dist. Ct. July 9, 2014). These courts’ rulings were stayed pending petitions
    for U.S. Supreme Court review of Kitchen and Bishop. When the Court later denied
    the petitions on October 6, 2014, Kitchen, 
    574 U.S. 874
    (2014) (No. 14-124); Bishop,
    
    574 U.S. 875
    (2014) (No. 14-136), the Tenth Circuit lifted its stay of the Burns
    preliminary injunction, the district court made its injunction permanent in Burns v.
    Hickenlooper, No. 14-cv-01817-RM-KLM, 
    2014 WL 5312541
    , at *1 (D. Colo. Oct. 17,
    2014), and Colorado began to recognize same-sex marriages.
    ¶31    Eight months later, the U.S. Supreme Court handed down its decision in
    Obergefell. Reasoning that the fundamental right to marry “appl[ies] with equal
    force to same-sex 
    couples,” 576 U.S. at 665
    , the Court held that “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,”
    id. at 675.
    In so
    18
    doing, the Court expressly overruled its earlier decision in Baker
    , id., and held that
    it was unconstitutional for states “to bar same-sex couples from marriage on the
    same terms as accorded to couples of the opposite sex,”
    id. at 680,
    or “to refuse to
    recognize a lawful same-sex marriage performed in another [s]tate on the ground
    of its same-sex character,”
    id. at 681.
    Notably, the Court held that the various state
    laws challenged by the litigants in that case4 were “invalid to the extent they
    exclude same-sex couples from civil marriage on the same terms and conditions
    as opposite-sex couples.”
    Id. at 675–76.
    B. Recognition of a Common Law Same-Sex Marriage
    Before Obergefell
    ¶32   The question raised in this case is whether a court may recognize a common
    law same-sex marriage entered in Colorado before the state recognized same-sex
    couples’ fundamental right to marry. LaFleur argues that he and Pyfer could not
    have entered into a common law marriage predating Obergefell because (1) the
    parties could not, as a matter of law, have formed the requisite intent to enter into
    a common law marriage when same-sex marriage was not recognized as lawful;
    and (2) Obergefell did not have retroactive effect. We disagree.
    4Obergefell involved a collection of cases that originated in Michigan, Kentucky,
    Ohio, and Tennessee and were brought by fourteen same-sex couples and two
    men whose same-sex partners were 
    deceased. 576 U.S. at 652
    –53.
    19
    1. Obergefell Rendered Colorado’s Restrictions on Same-
    Sex Marriage Void Ab Initio
    ¶33   Obergefell struck down state laws that excluded same-sex couples from civil
    marriage as 
    unconstitutional. 576 U.S. at 674
    –75. The longstanding general rule
    is that a statute that is declared unconstitutional is void ab initio; it is inoperative
    as if it had never been enacted. Norton v. Shelby County, 
    118 U.S. 425
    , 442 (1886)
    (“An unconstitutional act is not a law; it confers no rights; it imposes no duties; it
    affords no protection; . . . it is, in legal contemplation, as inoperative as though it
    had never been passed.”); Coulter v. Routt Cnty. Comm’rs, 
    11 P. 199
    , 203 (Colo. 1886)
    (“When a statute is adjudged to be unconstitutional, it is as if it never had been.”
    (quoting Thomas M. Cooley, A Treatise on the Constitutional Limitations Which Rest
    upon the Legislative Power of the States of the American Union 188 (2d ed. 1871))); see
    also 16A Am. Jur. 2d Constitutional Law § 194 (2020) (“Since unconstitutionality
    dates from the time of its enactment and not merely from the date of the decision
    so branding it, an unconstitutional law, in legal contemplation, is as inoperative as
    if it had never been passed and never existed; that is, it is void ab initio.” (footnotes
    omitted)).
    ¶34   Under this principle, state law restrictions on same-sex marriage—such as
    Colo. Const. art. II, § 31, and section 14-2-104(1)(b) and -104(2)—deemed
    unconstitutional in Obergefell, cannot stand as an impediment to the recognition of
    a same-sex marriage predating that decision. Recognition of a same-sex marriage
    20
    is the remedy for the state’s earlier violation of the couple’s constitutional rights;
    the failure to recognize such a marriage effectively continues to enforce the very
    laws deemed invalid. By logical extension, because Obergefell held that states must
    allow same-sex couples to enter marriages on the “same terms and conditions as
    opposite-sex couples,” 
    Obergefell, 576 U.S. at 676
    , and because Colorado recognizes
    common law marriages between opposite sex-couples, it must also recognize such
    marriages between same-sex couples—including those entered into pre-Obergefell.
    ¶35   We find In re Estate of Carter, 
    159 A.3d 970
    (Pa. Super. Ct. 2017), instructive
    on this point. There, a Pennsylvania appellate court reversed a lower court’s
    ruling that it was “legally impossible” for a same-sex couple to prove a common
    law marriage where the state abolished common law marriages in 2005 and same-
    sex marriages were not recognized until May 2014.
    Id. at 977.
    The court observed
    that the premise of the lower court’s analysis—that the state’s now-invalidated
    exclusionary marriage law was legally binding during the time the couple might
    otherwise have entered into a common law marriage—“misreads the fundamental
    import” of Obergefell.
    Id. I
    t concluded that 
    “a court today may not rely on the
    now-invalidated provisions of the Marriage Law to deny th[e] constitutional
    reality” that “same-sex couples have precisely the same capacity to enter marriage
    contracts as do opposite-sex couples,”
    id., and held that
    because different-sex
    21
    couples may establish a common law marriage predating 2005, same-sex couples
    must also have that right
    , id. at 977–78. ¶36
      For the same reason, we disagree with the South Carolina Court of Appeals’
    decision in Swicegood v. Thompson, 
    847 S.E.2d 104
    , 112 (S.C. App. 2020), which held
    that the state’s marriage statute, although invalidated by Obergefell, nevertheless
    “operated as an impediment to the formation of a common-law marriage between
    same-sex couples when it was still in force.”       (Emphasis added.)      This view
    mistakenly assumes that the unconstitutional law, although void, was ever in
    force. “[W]hat a court does with regard to an unconstitutional law is simply to
    ignore it. It decides the case ‘disregarding the [unconstitutional] law,’ because a law
    repugnant to the Constitution ‘is void, and is as no law.’” Reynoldsville Casket Co. v.
    Hyde, 
    514 U.S. 749
    , 760 (1995) (Scalia, J., concurring) (alteration in original)
    (citations omitted) (first quoting Marbury v. Madison, 
    5 U.S. 137
    , 178 (1803); and
    then quoting Ex parte Siebold, 
    100 U.S. 371
    , 376 (1880)). To treat a law repugnant to
    the Constitution as a barrier to forming an agreement to be married fails to
    disregard that unconstitutional law; indeed, it resurrects it. Put differently, to hold
    that a same-sex couple may enter a marriage only after Obergefell wholly disregards
    the effect of that decision.
    ¶37   Similarly, we reject LaFleur’s contention that, as a matter of law, it was
    impossible for a same-sex couple to form the requisite intent to enter into a
    22
    common     law marriage       before   Colorado recognized       same-sex     couples’
    fundamental right to marry.
    ¶38   As we hold today in Hogsett, to enter the legal and social institution of
    marriage, a couple must mutually agree “to enter a marital relationship—that is, to
    share a life together as spouses in a committed, intimate relationship of mutual
    support and obligation.” Hogsett, ¶ 3. That the marital relationship was not
    recognized at the time does not change the nature of the relationship itself. An
    analogy to anti-miscegenation laws is instructive. LaFleur’s argument suggests
    that an interracial couple lacked the capacity, as a matter of law, to enter into a
    marriage pre-Loving because the state in which they resided did not recognize the
    relationship. But, as noted above, courts rejected such logic in the wake of the
    Loving decision. See, e.g., 
    Reaves, 434 P.2d at 298
    ; 
    Lewis, 306 F. Supp. at 1183
    –84. In
    the wake of Obergefell, we do the same for same-sex couples.
    ¶39   To the extent that LaFleur contends that he did not anticipate that his
    relationship could carry legal consequences, we are unpersuaded. Many couples
    may not appreciate or intend the legal consequences of entering into a marital
    relationship, or anticipate the ways in which those consequences may shift over
    23
    time as the law evolves.5 But a couple need not intend the legal consequences of a
    marital relationship in order to intend to enter into the relationship itself. See
    Hogsett, ¶ 54 (“Parties asserting a common law marriage need not prove that they
    had detailed knowledge of and intent to obtain all the legal consequences that
    attach to marriage.”). Instead, the focus is on whether the parties intended to enter
    into a relationship that is marital in nature. See Hogsett, ¶ 49 (“The key question is
    whether the parties mutually intended to enter a marital relationship—that is, to
    share a life together as spouses in a committed, intimate relationship of mutual
    support and mutual obligation.”). The myriad rights, benefits, and responsibilities
    5 We disagree with LaFleur’s attempt to paint lawful same-sex marriage as an
    unthinkable turn of events at the time of the parties’ ceremony, given that the
    Goodridge opinion that struck down Massachusetts’s same-sex marriage ban had
    been announced just two weeks earlier and was widely reported. See, e.g., Gay-
    Marriage Ruling Hits Home—Both Sides See Extended Fight over Issue in Colorado,
    Denver Post, Nov. 20, 2003, at B-01, NewsBank (explaining that “[v]olleys were
    already being fired between pro- and anti-gay rights factions [in Colorado], fewer
    than 24 hours after the controversial ruling by the Massachusetts Supreme Court”
    and speculating that “the Massachusetts decision will serve as a launching pad”
    for the invalidation of similar state and federal laws); Peggy Lowe & M.E.
    Sprengelmeyer, State Split on Gay Ruling—Massachusetts Court Leaves Some Happy,
    Others Steaming, Rocky Mountain News, Nov. 19, 2003, at 5A, NewsBank; David
    Von Drehle, Gay Marriage is a Right, Massachusetts Court Rules, Wash. Post (Nov.
    19, 2003), https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/2003/11/19/gay-
    marriage-is-a-right-massachusetts-court-rules/98368878-a113-4710-9813-
    7c98ac5630d9/ [https://perma.cc/QM7Q-SV27]; Elizabeth Mehren, Mass. High
    Court      Backs   Gay     Marriage,      L.A.    Times    (Nov.      19,    2003),
    https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2003-nov-19-na-marriage19-
    story.html [https://perma.cc/BPG8-E9TR].
    24
    bestowed on the marital relationship by the state reflect the government’s and
    society’s pledge to support and protect the union, but they are incidental to the
    marital relationship itself. See 
    Obergefell, 576 U.S. at 669
    –70. Thus, the fact that a
    couple did not anticipate or intend the legal consequences of entering a marital
    relationship does not render their intent to enter into such a relationship legally
    impossible.
    2. Any New Rule Announced in Obergefell Applies
    Retroactively
    ¶40   As a general rule, judicial decisions operate retroactively. Courts apply
    settled precedent and legal principles to the disputes before them, and litigants
    typically have no basis to argue that they are exempt from already-decided legal
    rules. See James B. Beam Distilling Co. v. Georgia, 
    501 U.S. 529
    , 534 (1991). It is only
    when the law changes in some respect that the question of nonretroactivity
    arises—that is, whether the court should apply the old rule or the new one.
    Id. ¶41
      In Obergefell, the Supreme Court did not purport to announce a new right;
    instead, it declared that the long-recognized fundamental right to marry could
    “[n]o longer . . . be denied” to same-sex 
    couples. 576 U.S. at 675
    . Thus, it is
    questionable whether Obergefell calls for nonretroactivity analysis. However, even
    assuming Obergefell did not merely recognize an existing fundamental right to
    marry but instead announced a new rule of federal law, we conclude that the
    25
    decision applies retroactively to marriages (including common law marriages)
    predating that decision.
    ¶42   Whether Obergefell applies retroactively is a question of federal law. The
    U.S. Supreme Court has recognized that state courts enjoy freedom “to limit the
    retroactive operation of their own interpretations of state law,” 
    Harper, 509 U.S. at 100
    , but the “question is a federal one where the rule at issue itself derives from
    federal law, constitutional or otherwise,” Beam Distilling 
    Co., 501 U.S. at 535
    .6
    ¶43   Though the U.S. Supreme Court’s framework for assessing the retroactive
    effect of its decisions has evolved over the past thirty years, see Chevron Oil Co. v.
    Huson, 
    404 U.S. 97
    , 106–07 (1971); Beam Distilling 
    Co., 501 U.S. at 535
    –39, under the
    Court’s more recent case law, it is clear that “[w]hen [the U.S. Supreme] Court
    applies a rule of federal law to the parties before it, that rule is the controlling
    6 The parties briefed this case under the standards governing retroactivity that this
    court identified in Marinez v. Industrial Commission of the State of Colorado, 
    746 P.2d 552
    , 556 (Colo. 1987) (applying the factors from the U.S. Supreme Court decision
    in Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson, 
    404 U.S. 97
    (1971)). However, Marinez involved a state
    court ruling. We have relied on the Chevron Oil factors in determining whether to
    apply a state court ruling retroactively, see Martin Marietta Corp. v. Lorenz, 
    823 P.2d 100
    , 112 n.7 (Colo. 1992) (continuing “to adhere to the Chevron analysis in resolving
    the issue of retroactive or prospective application of [a] state judicial decision”).
    But this case concerns retroactive application of a question of federal constitutional
    law. We are therefore bound by the U.S. Supreme Court’s case law. See Beam
    Distilling 
    Co., 501 U.S. at 544
    (deviating from the Chevron Oil retroactivity analysis).
    26
    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 [the Court’s] announcement of the rule,” 
    Harper, 509 U.S. at 97
    (emphasis
    added).7
    ¶44   In Obergefell, the Supreme Court did not reserve the question of whether the
    rule of law announced in the case—that the Constitution entitles same-sex couples
    to civil marriage “on the same terms and conditions as opposite-sex
    couples”—operated only prospectively. 
    See 576 U.S. at 674
    –76, 679–81. Rather,
    the Court applied the ruling to the parties in the controversy before it.
    Id. ¶45
      Thus, under Harper, we conclude that Obergefell’s holding that restrictions
    on same-sex marriages are unconstitutional “must be given full retroactive
    7 Though this approach “has been attacked for its failure to take account of reliance
    on” now-changed law, Beam Distilling 
    Co., 501 U.S. at 536
    , it comports with the
    declaratory theory of law that judges “find the law” rather than “make it” or
    amend it
    , id. at 535–36;
    see also James B. Beam Distilling Co. v. Georgia, 
    501 U.S. 529
    ,
    549 (1991) (Scalia, J., concurring) (observing that judges “make” the law only
    insofar as they “find” it, “discerning what the law is, rather than decreeing what it
    is today changed to, or what it will tomorrow be”); Kermit Roosevelt III, A
    Retroactivity Retrospective, with Thoughts for the Future: What the Supreme Court
    Learned from Paul Mishkin and What it Might, 
    95 Cal. L
    . Rev. 1677, 1680–81 (2007)
    (“[T]he Court has no power to make law; law’s source is never the Court. An
    overruled decision is thus simply mistaken, and once the overruling court
    recognizes the mistake, it must also conclude that the law has always been what it
    is now declared to be.”).
    27
    effect . . . as to all events, regardless of whether such events predate or postdate”
    the decision. 
    Harper, 509 U.S. at 97
    . Because a different-sex couple may prove a
    common law marriage in Colorado predating 2014, a same-sex couple must also
    have that opportunity. Accordingly, courts may recognize a common law same-
    sex marriage entered in Colorado before the state acknowledged the right of same-
    sex couples to marry.
    ¶46   Virtually every other jurisdiction to consider this question thus far has held
    that Obergefell applies retroactively to allow recognition of a common law same-
    sex marriage predating the decision. See, e.g., Ranolls v. Dewling, 
    223 F. Supp. 3d 613
    , 622 (E.D. Tex. 2016) (concluding that under the framework set forth in Beam
    Distilling Co. and Harper, Obergefell applied retroactively); Gill v. Nostrand,
    
    206 A.3d 869
    , 874–75 (D.C. 2019) (“We now expressly recognize, as the trial court
    did and as Obergefell [and other authorities] require, that a same-sex couple may
    enter into common-law marriage in the District of Columbia and that this rule
    applies retroactively.”); In re J.K.N.A., 
    454 P.3d 642
    , 649 (Mont. 2019) (“Obergefell’s
    holding that state prohibitions against same-sex marriage violate the United States
    28
    Constitution operates retroactively in relation to [a party’s] claim that a common
    law marriage existed with [her same-sex partner] . . . .”).8
    ¶47   One deviation from this trend is the Swicegood decision discussed above.
    Notably, the Swicegood court held (consistent with Ranolls, Gill, and In re J.K.N.A.)
    that its review of U.S. Supreme Court case law “compels the conclusion [that]
    Obergefell must be applied 
    retroactively.” 847 S.E.2d at 110
    . And yet the court
    reasoned that the state’s invalidated marriage statute was “‘a pre-existing,
    separate, independent rule of state law, having nothing to do with retroactivity,’
    which formed an ‘independent legal basis’ for” denying relief.
    Id. at 112
    (quoting
    Reynoldsville Casket Co. v. Hyde, 
    514 U.S. 749
    , 756 (1995) (majority opinion)).
    ¶48   The Swicegood court’s reliance on Reynoldsville Casket is misguided. In that
    case, the U.S. Supreme Court acknowledged that “when two different rules of law
    each independently bar recovery, then a decision” that retroactively invalidates
    one rule will not affect the result so long as “[t]he other, constitutionally adequate
    rule remains in place.” Reynoldsville 
    Casket, 514 U.S. at 757
    . But this principle does
    not allow a same-sex marriage ban to operate as an impediment to the formation
    8 The court of appeals division in Hogsett arrived at the same conclusion. In re
    Marriage of Hogsett & Neale, 
    2018 COA 176
    , ¶ 22, __ P.3d __ (“Inherent in our
    conclusion is the recognition that Obergefell applies retroactively in determining
    the existence of a common law marriage.”).
    29
    of a common law marriage because, for the reasons discussed earlier, such an
    impediment would “critically depend[] upon the continued application of . . . a
    principle that [the] Court has held unconstitutional.” Id.9 Any impediment to
    marriage imposed by a same-sex marriage ban is not a “constitutionally adequate
    rule”—it is part and parcel with the unconstitutional law itself.           Holding
    otherwise,   as   the   Swicegood   decision   itself   demonstrates,   renders   the
    acknowledged retroactivity of Obergefell utterly meaningless.
    ¶49   In sum, for the reasons above, we conclude that a court may recognize a
    common law same-sex marriage entered in Colorado before the state recognized
    same-sex couples’ fundamental right to marry.
    C. Application of the Updated Common Law Marriage
    Framework
    ¶50   Having concluded that Pyfer and LaFleur were not, as a matter of law,
    barred from entering into a common law marriage, we next determine whether a
    common law marriage was established under the refined test we announce in
    Hogsett. “A determination of whether a common law marriage exists turns on
    9 This fact distinguishes South Carolina’s same-sex marriage ban from other
    “impediments” to marriage discussed by the court. See 
    Swicegood, 847 S.E.2d at 109
    (discussing impediments such as where one party has an existing marriage or
    where the parties reside in a jurisdiction that does not recognize common law
    marriage).
    30
    issues of fact and credibility, which are properly within the trial court’s
    discretion.” 
    Lucero, 747 P.2d at 665
    . Accordingly, we review the court’s factual
    findings for clear error and its common law marriage finding for an abuse of
    discretion.
    ¶51   LaFleur argues that the parties did not, as a factual matter, have the intent
    to enter into a common law marriage. We disagree and conclude that the record
    supports the district court’s conclusion that Pyfer and LaFleur manifested a
    mutual intent to enter into a marital relationship.
    ¶52   “[A] common law marriage may be established by the mutual consent or
    agreement of the couple to enter the legal and social institution of marriage,
    followed by conduct manifesting that mutual agreement.” Hogsett, ¶ 49. “In
    assessing whether a common law marriage has been established, courts should
    give weight to evidence reflecting a couple’s express agreement to marry.”
    Id. I
    n
    the absence 
    of such evidence, courts may infer such an agreement from the parties’
    conduct.
    Id. ¶53
      As we explain in Hogsett, the factors identified in 
    Lucero, 747 P.2d at 665
    , can
    still be relevant to this inquiry. Courts should therefore consider factors such as
    cohabitation[;] reputation in the community as spouses[;]
    maintenance of joint banking and credit accounts[;] purchase and
    joint ownership of property[;] filing of joint tax returns[;] . . . the use
    of one spouse’s surname by the other or by children raised by the
    parties[;] . . . evidence of shared financial responsibility, such as
    leases in both partners’ names, joint bills, or other payment records;
    31
    evidence of joint estate planning, including wills, powers of attorney,
    beneficiary and emergency contact designations; . . . symbols of
    commitment, such as ceremonies, anniversaries, cards, gifts, and the
    couple’s references to or labels for one another[;] . . . [and] the parties’
    sincerely held beliefs regarding the institution of marriage.
    Hogsett, ¶¶ 55–56. These factors must be assessed in context, however, and “the
    inferences to be drawn from the parties’ conduct may vary depending on the
    circumstances.”
    Id. at ¶ 49. ¶54
      As in Hogsett, “[w]e begin by reviewing evidence of an express agreement
    to marry.” ¶ 62. Here, Pyfer proposed marriage to LaFleur, and LaFleur accepted.
    The parties then participated in a ceremony that, as the district court explained,
    “certainly appear[ed] to be a wedding.”           For instance, Pyfer and LaFleur
    exchanged vows during the ceremony, which was officiated by a reverend and
    was attended by friends and family. They exchanged rings and wore tuxedos. A
    toast was given. And Pyfer and LaFleur signed a document titled “Certificate of
    Holy Union”—much like a couple would sign a marriage license. This evidence
    suggests, as the district court found, that the parties expressly agreed to enter into
    a common law marriage as of November 30, 2003, the date of the ceremony.
    ¶55   That said, given the range of meanings that a same-sex couple might ascribe
    to such a ceremony before Obergefell, it is important to examine the other
    circumstances of the relationship to discern the parties’ intent. Hogsett, ¶ 54 n.9.
    Here, the parties’ conduct was such that, in addition to the ceremony, a mutual
    32
    agreement to enter into a marital relationship may be inferred. Of course, some of
    the evidence does not point in either direction.         While it would have been
    significant had one of the parties used the other’s surname, for example, the fact
    that they did not do so does not necessarily suggest that the parties did not intend
    to be married. See Hogsett, ¶ 45 (“[T]here may be any number of reasons, including
    cultural ones, that spouses and children do not take one partner’s name at
    marriage.”). Similarly, the parties’ failure to file joint tax returns reveals little,
    especially given that for the majority of their relationship, this was not a possibility
    under federal law. See Hogsett, ¶ 66.
    ¶56   Other factors, by contrast, are more instructive. Although the parties did
    not share joint bank accounts or own property together, they cohabitated, and
    LaFleur financially supported Pyfer, both in his day-to-day life and in his pursuit
    of a career. And Pyfer listed LaFleur as his spouse on several forms over the years.
    ¶57   LaFleur did not tell his coworkers that he was married. But there was
    testimony that LaFleur worked in an environment that was not welcoming of
    same-sex couples; thus, viewed in context, his failure to publicize his relationship
    with Pyfer does not necessarily reflect a lack of mutual agreement to be married.
    See Hogsett, ¶ 51 (“There may be cases where, particularly for same-sex partners, a
    couple’s choice not to broadly publicize the nature of their relationship may be
    explained by reasons other than their lack of mutual agreement to be married.”).
    33
    Pyfer, by contrast, “held himself out as married to family and friends” with
    LaFleur’s knowledge.
    ¶58   True, there was evidence, toward the end of their relationship, that Pyfer
    was involved in an extramarital affair and that Pyfer and LaFleur ceased sharing
    a bedroom and instead lived separately in the same house. However, the parties’
    actions as their relationship deteriorated cannot be used to override their earlier
    agreement to be married. See Hogsett, ¶ 57 (“[C]onduct inconsistent with marriage
    that occurs as a relationship is breaking down should not negate a finding of
    common law marriage where there is evidence of the parties’ earlier mutual
    agreement to be married. In other words, infidelity, physical separation, or other
    conduct arising as the relationship is ending does not invalidate a couple’s prior
    mutual agreement to enter a common law marriage.”).
    ¶59   In short, viewing the record as a whole and considering the totality of the
    circumstances, the district court’s conclusion that the parties mutually agreed to
    be married and “intended to be joined with [each other] for the rest of [their]
    li[ves]” is supported by the record. Accordingly, we affirm the court’s conclusion
    that Pyfer and LaFleur entered into a common law marriage.
    D. Allocation of Marital Assets and Debts and Award of
    Spousal Maintenance
    ¶60   Pyfer contends that the district court abused its discretion in allocating the
    marital assets and debts between Pyfer and LaFleur, arguing that the court did not
    34
    make adequate findings or adequately consider the statutory factors pursuant to
    section 14-10-113. Pyfer also contends that the court abused its discretion in
    awarding a grossly inadequate award of spousal maintenance, arguing that it
    (1) did not make adequate findings or adequately consider the statutory factors
    pursuant to section 14-10-114; (2) incorrectly computed the guideline amount of
    maintenance; and (3) did not consider the division of property and denial of
    Pyfer’s request for attorney’s fees. We agree and therefore remand for the district
    court to reconsider its property division and spousal maintenance award and
    make appropriate findings under sections 14-10-113 and -114.
    1. Division of Property
    ¶61   The division of marital property is left to the district court’s discretion. In re
    Marriage of Cardona & Castro, 
    2014 CO 3
    , ¶ 9, 
    316 P.3d 626
    , 629 (citing In re Marriage
    of Hunt, 
    909 P.2d 525
    , 537 (Colo. 1995)). We will not disturb the district court’s
    division of property “unless there has been a clear abuse of discretion,” In re
    Balanson, 
    25 P.3d 28
    , 35 (Colo. 2001), that, when viewed in relation to the property
    division as a whole, “affects the substantial rights of the parties,”
    id. at 36. ¶62
      Section 14-10-113(1) provides that the court “shall set apart to each spouse
    his or her property and shall divide the marital property, without regard to marital
    misconduct, in such proportions as the court deems just.” In making its equitable
    distribution of marital property, the court must consider “all relevant factors,”
    35
    including (1) each spouse’s contribution “to the acquisition of the marital
    property, including the contribution of a spouse as homemaker;” (2) “[t]he value
    of the property set apart to each spouse;” and (3) each spouse’s economic
    circumstances “at the time the division of property is to become effective.”
    Id. ¶63
      We have interpreted section 14-10-113 to require a multi-step analysis. See
    
    Balanson, 25 P.3d at 38
    . First, the district court must determine “whether an
    interest constitutes property.”
    Id. I
    f so, the 
    court then must classify such property
    as marital or separate.
    Id. Finally, it must
    value and make an equitable
    distribution of the marital property after considering the statutory factors.
    Id. ¶64
      Here, we cannot tell from the record whether the district court engaged in
    such an analysis.    It was uncontested that the $160,000 increase in value of
    LaFleur’s home was marital property.           But LaFleur maintained multiple
    retirement accounts, some of which predated the marriage, and the court did not
    classify the contents of those accounts as separate or marital property. Indeed,
    neither LaFleur nor the court traced the contents of those retirement accounts—a
    requirement to claiming separate ownership. See In re Marriage of Seewald, 
    22 P.3d 580
    , 586 (Colo. App. 2001) (“The court also did not make any findings concerning
    the classification of the specific assets comprising the trust, including whether
    husband was able to trace the present trust assets back to his premarital holdings
    sufficiently to overcome the presumption of marital property.” (citing In re
    36
    Marriage of Renier, 
    854 P.2d 1382
    , 1384 (Colo. App. 1993))). Instead, the court
    awarded Pyfer $50,000 of LaFleur’s Roth IRA and ordered that the remaining
    retirement assets be retained by the named account holder. The court took a
    similar approach regarding each party’s debts, stating, “[E]ach party is to pay all
    debts in his name.” The court did not attempt to determine whether such debt
    was separate or marital.
    ¶65   Consequently, we are unable to determine whether the district court’s
    property division was inequitable, and we must set aside the property division
    and remand for further proceedings. Upon reconsideration, the parties may well
    end up in the same position. But the court must first conduct the multi-step
    analysis by classifying each item of property as separate or marital, valuating the
    property, and considering the statutory factors identified in section 14-10-113.10
    10 On remand, the court should consider each party’s financial, emotional, and
    other contributions to the relationship. For example, at the permanent orders
    hearing, the court noted that Pyfer stayed home and did not work or pay rent to
    LaFleur. Yet in marital relationships, one spouse often financially supports the
    other. Having concluded that Pyfer and LaFleur had entered into a common law
    marriage, it is not clear why the court expected one spouse to pay rent to the other
    to live in the couple’s marital home. Moreover, the fact that Pyfer did not hold a
    steady job does not mean he did not contribute to the marital relationship in a
    meaningful way, nor should the fact that he did not work be held against Pyfer in
    equitably distributing the marital assets and debts or awarding spousal
    maintenance.
    37
    2. Award of Spousal Maintenance
    ¶66   “[A]wards of spousal maintenance . . . flow from the property distribution.”
    In re Marriage of de Koning, 
    2016 CO 2
    , ¶ 26, 
    364 P.3d 494
    , 498. In other words, “the
    issues are interdependent.”
    Id. Therefore, “[w]hen a
    trial court is required to
    revisit a property division, it must also reevaluate [the] maintenance . . . award[]
    in light of the updated property division.”
    Id. Accordingly, we also
    set aside the
    maintenance award and remand for reconsideration. On remand, the district court
    should follow the detailed procedure set forth in section 14-10-114, making explicit
    factual findings where required and addressing the factors relevant to its
    determination.
    IV. Conclusion
    ¶67   We conclude that, because Obergefell struck down state laws that excluded
    same-sex couples from civil marriage as unconstitutional, such laws cannot stand
    as an impediment to the recognition of a same-sex marriage predating that
    decision, but rather are treated as if they never existed. To the extent Obergefell
    announced a new rule of federal law, that decision applies retroactively under
    Harper because the Court in Obergefell applied its rule of federal law to the litigants
    before it. We therefore hold that a court may recognize a common law same-sex
    marriage entered in Colorado before the state recognized same-sex couples’
    fundamental right to marry.
    38
    ¶68   Accordingly, we agree with the district court that the parties here were not,
    as a matter of law, barred from entering into a common law marriage in 2003.
    Applying the updated framework announced in Hogsett, we also agree with the
    court that the parties did in fact enter into a common law marriage.           We
    nevertheless reverse the district court’s division of property and award of spousal
    maintenance    and    remand    for   further   findings   in   accordance    with
    sections 14-10-113 and -114.
    CHIEF JUSTICE BOATRIGHT concurs in part and concurs in the judgment.
    JUSTICE SAMOUR dissents.
    39
    CHIEF JUSTICE BOATRIGHT, concurring in part and concurring in the
    judgment.
    ¶69   For the reasons stated in my concurrence in the judgment only to In re
    Marriage of Hogsett & Neale, 
    2021 CO 1
    , __ P.3d __ (Boatright, C.J., concurring in the
    judgment only), I disagree with the majority’s decision to announce new factors
    for establishing common law marriage on the facts of that case. As a result, I do
    not think that the same new factors should be applied here.            Furthermore,
    application of any factors is unnecessary because, in my view, the fact that Dean
    LaFleur and Timothy Pyfer had a ceremony that was—in every way—a wedding
    evinces their mutual intent to be married. In the simplest of terms, LaFleur and
    Pyfer are married because they had a wedding. I do agree with the majority,
    however, that the fundamental right to marry as outlined in Obergefell v. Hodges,
    
    576 U.S. 644
    , 674–75 (2015), “must be given retroactive effect.” Maj. op. ¶ 5. I also
    agree that LaFleur and Pyfer did, in fact, enter into a common law marriage, and
    that remand is appropriate for the district court to reconsider its property division
    and spousal maintenance award as well as make appropriate findings.
    Accordingly, I concur in part and concur in the judgment.
    ¶70   As the majority acknowledges, LaFleur and Pyfer held a ceremony on
    November 30, 2003, after Pyfer proposed marriage to LaFleur.
    Id. at ¶¶ 7, 10.
    In
    the district court’s words, “[t]here were rings, tuxes, attendance [by friends and
    family], [a] toast, vows, [and] a reverend,” and the couple signed a “Certificate of
    1
    Holy Union.”
    Id. at ¶ 10.
    This, the district court explained, “certainly appear[ed]
    to be a wedding.”
    Id. I
    agree. In my view, this was indisputably a wedding
    ceremony and effectively an “express agreement to marry.” In fact, I struggle to
    imagine stronger evidence of the couple’s “mutual consent or agreement . . . to
    enter the legal and social institution of marriage.” See Hogsett, ¶ 3. With such
    strong evidence substantiating mutual intent, therefore, it is clear—without
    application of factors—that LaFleur and Pyfer were in a common law marriage.
    ¶71   As I stated in my concurrence in the judgment only in Hogsett, when the
    record clearly establishes whether or not both parties intended to be married, a
    factors-based analysis proves a needlessly confusing and futile exercise. This case
    provides another good example of such an exercise: After reviewing the details of
    the ceremony and acknowledging the district court’s finding that—on the basis of
    the intent demonstrated by the ceremony—the parties entered into a common law
    marriage, the majority explains that, “the parties’ conduct was such that, in
    addition to the ceremony, a mutual agreement to enter into a marital relationship
    may be inferred.” Maj. op. at ¶ 54–55. In the discussion that follows, the majority
    acknowledges that “some of the evidence [considered under the factors] does not
    point in either direction,” while “[o]ther factors, by contrast, are more instructive.”
    Id. at ¶¶ 55, 56.
    This evidence and these factors include the parties’ use of different
    surnames, failure to file joint tax returns, financial arrangements, cohabitation,
    2
    public manifestations (or lack thereof) of marriage, and behavior when the
    relationship disintegrated.
    Id. at ¶¶ 55–58.
    In reaching its conclusion, the majority
    explains that, “viewing the record as a whole and considering the totality of the
    circumstances,” the district court’s “conclusion that the parties mutually agreed to
    be married . . . is supported by the record” and that, therefore, the parties entered
    into a common law marriage.
    Id. at ¶ 59. ¶72 I
    agree with the district court’s conclusion that the parties mutually agreed
    to be married—on the basis of the intent demonstrated by the wedding ceremony.
    The majority’s factor-based analysis does not add to the district court’s already-
    apparent and correct conclusion.       Thus, any factors-based analysis proves
    unnecessary.
    ¶73   In addition, establishing a specific date or at least an approximate timeframe
    for when the parties would have entered into a common law marriage is important
    because any conduct after the marriage began is not relevant—in a factor-based
    analysis or otherwise—to determining whether a common law marriage existed in
    the first place. The majority correctly notes in Hogsett, and reiterates here, that
    “conduct inconsistent with marriage that occurs as a relationship is breaking down
    does not negate a finding of common law marriage where there is evidence of the
    parties’ earlier mutual agreement to be married.” Hogsett, ¶ 57. This statement
    does not, in my view, go the full distance. Indeed, conduct inconsistent with
    3
    marriage that occurs after the marriage began—not just as the relationship is
    breaking down—is not relevant. If the evidence demonstrates that the parties
    formed a mutual intent to be married, then the parties entered into a common law
    marriage at that time. Any post-marriage evidence falls outside the scope of the
    inquiry. Here, it is evident when the parties’ marriage began: at their wedding
    ceremony on November 30, 2003.                The majority’s factor-based analysis
    nevertheless—and, in my view, erroneously—relies on evidence from after that
    point.
    ¶74      Furthermore, just as infidelity, separation, or other conduct inconsistent
    with marriage by a partner in a licensed marriage does not invalidate the licensed
    marriage, conduct inconsistent with marriage by a partner in a common law
    marriage does not invalidate the common law marriage. In other words, parties
    who enter into licensed or common law marriages remain married until they
    legally divorce, regardless of their conduct. To consider post-agreement-to-be-
    married evidence for common law marriages would be tantamount to considering
    the fictional concept of common law divorce.1 Thus, the fact that LaFleur and
    1No one asserts that common law divorce exists; and no one would reasonably
    argue that infidelity, separation, or other conduct inconsistent with marriage
    would constitute evidence that parties did not originally intend to be
    married—especially after the couple had a wedding ceremony.
    4
    Pyfer’s relationship eventually deteriorated is not relevant to the fact that they
    were common law married on November 30, 2003, and any factors relying on
    conduct after that date are, in my view, irrelevant.
    ¶75   In sum, I disagree with the majority’s decision to announce new factors for
    establishing common law marriage in Hogsett on the facts of that case, and
    therefore, do not think those factors should be applied in this case. Because I do
    agree with the majority, however, that the fundamental right to marry as outlined
    in 
    Obergefell, 576 U.S. at 674
    –75, “must be given retroactive effect,” maj. op. ¶ 5;
    that LaFleur and Pyfer did, in fact, enter into a common law marriage; and that
    remand is appropriate for the district court to reconsider its property division and
    spousal maintenance award as well as make appropriate findings, I concur in part
    and concur in the judgment.
    5
    JUSTICE SAMOUR, dissenting.
    I. Introduction
    ¶76   Is it possible for a same-sex couple in Colorado to have mutually intended and
    agreed to enter into a legal marital relationship when both parties were aware that
    Colorado law prohibited same-sex marriage at the time? The answer is clearly no.
    When Pyfer and LaFleur participated in their wedding ceremony in November
    2003, they both understood that same-sex couples could not lawfully marry in
    Colorado    because    Colorado     considered    same-sex     marriage    unlawful,
    unenforceable, and invalid. Thus, Pyfer and LaFleur could not possibly have
    intended or agreed to enter into the legal relationship of marriage. And, because
    common law marriage in Colorado requires mutual intent and agreement to enter
    into the legal relationship of marriage, In re Marriage of Hogsett & Neale, 
    2021 CO 1
    ,
    ¶ 49, __ P.3d __, __, Pyfer and LaFleur cannot be deemed to have entered into a
    common law marriage.
    ¶77   Only after the Supreme Court’s decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, 
    576 U.S. 644
    (2015), rendered our state’s ban on same-sex marriage unconstitutional could
    Pyfer and LaFleur have mutually intended and agreed to enter into a common law
    1
    marriage.1 But Obergefell wasn’t announced until June 2015—more than a decade
    after Pyfer and LaFleur had their wedding ceremony.
    ¶78   The majority correctly notes that our state’s restriction on same-sex marriage
    was rendered void ab initio by Obergefell and must be treated as though it never
    existed.      Maj.   op.   ¶ 33.   But   the   majority   then   concludes—rather
    simplistically—that, as a result, there was no impediment to Pyfer and LaFleur
    being common law married.
    Id. at ¶ 34.
    Alternatively, the majority rules that
    Obergefell applies retroactively.
    Id. at ¶ 41.
    The majority misses the mark on both
    fronts.    As a matter of law, neither Obergefell’s effect on our state law nor
    Obergefell’s retroactive application can transform Pyfer and LaFleur’s mutual
    intent and agreement at the time of their wedding ceremony in 2003.
    ¶79   Rather than concede that the mutual intent and agreement requirement is a
    fly in the analytical ointment, the majority shoehorns Pyfer and LaFleur’s
    relationship into the confines of a common law marriage by engaging in a two-
    1The majority points out that in 2014, eight months before Obergefell, two Tenth
    Circuit cases out of Utah and Oklahoma had effectively declared Colorado’s
    prohibition on same-sex marriage unconstitutional. Maj. op. ¶ 30 (indicating that
    “Colorado began to recognize same-sex marriages” in October 2014). Be that as it
    may, given the way we framed the question we agreed to review, I assume for
    purposes of this dissent that Colorado’s prohibition on same-sex marriage became
    unconstitutional when Obergefell was penned in June 2015.
    2
    step dance. First, the majority pays lip service to, but declines to meaningfully
    embrace, the requirement regarding mutual intent and agreement to enter into a
    legal marital relationship—a requirement embedded in Colorado’s common law
    marriage jurisprudence.       In the process, the majority clouds the issue by
    downgrading this requirement and affording preeminence to a different
    requirement—intent and agreement to enter into any type of marital relationship
    (legal or otherwise). Second, the majority curiously rules that, while it is true that
    the parties must have intended and agreed to enter into the legal and social
    institution of marriage, they need not have intended and agreed to incur the
    consequences of a legally sanctioned marriage.
    ¶80   The majority attempts to maneuver a judicial tightrope today. But I find its
    approach, at best, strained beyond the breaking point and, at worst, internally
    inconsistent. Because the majority’s position is legally untenable, utterly unfair to
    LaFleur as well as many others in his shoes, and likely to foster further confusion
    in this area of the law, I respectfully dissent.2
    2I wholeheartedly agree with the concerns Justice Hart eloquently expresses about
    common law marriage in her special concurrence in In re Marriage of Hogsett &
    Neale, 
    2021 CO 1
    , __ P.3d __ (Hart, J., specially concurring).
    3
    II. Analysis
    ¶81   As we observed in People v. Lucero, 
    747 P.2d 660
    , 663 (Colo. 1987), Colorado
    recognizes common law marriage, which dispenses with the formalities of a
    statutory, licensed marriage. In a common law marriage, two people create a
    legally valid marital relationship without having to hold a marriage ceremony
    conducted in accordance with statutory requirements. In re Marriage of J.M.H. &
    Rouse, 
    143 P.3d 1116
    , 1118 (Colo. App. 2006).        A common law marriage is
    established “by the mutual consent or agreement of the parties” to enter into a
    lawful marital relationship, “followed by a mutual and open assumption” of that
    relationship. 
    Lucero, 747 P.2d at 663
    .
    ¶82   Today, in the companion case of In re Marriage of Hogsett & Neale, the
    majority gives the relevant factors we articulated in Lucero a much-needed tune-
    up to account for our society’s evolution during the last three-plus decades. I
    applaud those efforts. However, the majority and I part ways because, while it
    purports to preserve the analytical framework forged by Lucero, it effectively
    endorses a new common law marriage test by eroding the significance of the
    parties’ intent and agreement to enter into a legal marital relationship.
    ¶83   The majority echoes Lucero’s principal lesson and holds that “a common law
    marriage may be established by the mutual consent or agreement of the couple to
    enter the legal and social institution of marriage, followed by conduct manifesting
    4
    that mutual agreement.” Hogsett, ¶ 3 (emphasis added). But it then backtracks,
    explaining that “[t]he core query is whether the parties intended to enter a marital
    relationship—that is, to share a life together as spouses in a committed, intimate
    relationship of mutual support and obligation.”
    Id. What happened to
    the “legal”
    aspect of the test? Why isn’t that part of the “core query”?
    ¶84   Apparently, the majority considers mutual intent and agreement to enter
    into a legal marital relationship a peripheral requirement of common law marriage.
    But I don’t understand the difference the majority draws between a core
    requirement and a peripheral requirement: Either something is a requirement or
    it isn’t. And a peripheral requirement is, by definition, still a requirement.
    ¶85   Must the parties have intended and agreed to enter into a legal marital
    relationship? Or does it suffice that they intended and agreed to enter into any
    marital relationship (legal or otherwise)? It can’t be both. If it’s the former, I’m
    not sure why the majority demotes to peripheral status the requirement of mutual
    intent and agreement to enter into a legal marital relationship. And if it’s the latter,
    the majority ought to come out and admit that it’s overturning decades of
    precedent construing the common law as requiring a mutual intent and agreement
    to enter into a legal marital relationship. It is difficult to conclude that the majority
    isn’t changing the common law today. After all, by framing the “core query” as it
    does, the majority drains all the life out of our longstanding common law marriage
    5
    requirement that couples mutually intend and agree to enter into a legal marital
    relationship.
    ¶86    Here, Pyfer cannot satisfy the requirement of mutual intent and agreement
    to enter into a legal marital relationship. The district court found that he proposed
    marriage to LaFleur, that LaFleur accepted his proposal, and that the two held a
    wedding ceremony in November 2003.              But, at that time, the Colorado
    Constitution stated that “[o]nly a union of one man and one woman shall be valid
    or recognized as a marriage in this state.” Colo. Const. art. 2, § 31, invalidated by
    Obergefell v. Hodges, 
    576 U.S. 644
    (2015). Similarly, section 14-2-104, C.R.S. (2003),
    invalidated by Obergefell v. Hodges, 
    576 U.S. 644
    (2015), provided, as pertinent here,
    that “a marriage is valid in this state if . . . [i]t is only between one man and one
    woman.” § 14-2-104(1)(b). Subsection (2) of the same statute reiterated that “any
    marriage contracted within . . . this state” not between one man and one woman
    shall not be “recognized as valid in this state.” § 14-2-104(2).
    ¶87   Neither Pyfer nor LaFleur claims that he was unaware that Colorado law
    did not recognize same-sex marriage in 2003. To the contrary, the record reflects
    that each was well aware of this restriction. Consequently, whatever marriage
    Pyfer and LaFleur intended to enter into in 2003, one thing is for certain: It could
    not possibly have been a legal marriage. That is, as a matter of law, Pyfer and
    6
    LaFleur could not have intended or agreed to enter into a marital relationship
    recognized as legal, enforceable, and valid in Colorado.
    ¶88   Because the marriage Pyfer and LaFleur entered into in 2003 was not legally
    binding—something they both realized—there was no basis for either of them to
    believe that a dissolution proceeding could ever be initiated in the event the
    marriage failed. Nor did they have reason to think that a court could ever be called
    upon to distribute their assets and debts or to order either of them to pay
    maintenance. It follows that neither Pyfer nor LaFleur had cause to consider a
    prenuptial agreement or any other type of premarital arrangement to protect
    himself in case the marriage failed.
    ¶89   LaFleur, the party who owns almost all the assets in this relationship,
    confirms that he didn’t expect there could be legal consequences if his marriage
    with Pyfer failed. Not only was that a reasonable expectation, it was the only
    rational one. Indeed, how could there be legal consequences vis-à-vis a dissolution
    proceeding as a result of entering into a marriage that was not recognized as a
    marriage under Colorado law and was thus devoid of legal effect? Something
    that’s not legally binding cannot simultaneously be legally binding.             In
    meteorological terms, it’s either raining or it isn’t.
    ¶90   The majority responds that nothing is amiss here because, following
    Obergefell, we have to treat our now-defunct constitutional and statutory
    7
    provisions prohibiting same-sex marriage as though they never existed.
    Therefore, urges the majority, there was no obstacle preventing Pyfer and LaFleur
    from entering into a common law marriage in 2003.
    ¶91   The inherent flaw in the majority’s facile rationale is that it overlooks that a
    requirement of common law marriage is mutual intent and agreement to be lawfully
    married.   Treating, as we must, our state law barring same-sex marriage
    nonexistent in 2003 does not alter the fact that Pyfer and LaFleur did not mutually
    intend or agree to enter into a legal marriage. Nor could they have done so—they
    weren’t clairvoyant, and their intent and agreement could only have been based
    on what they knew at the time. How can two individuals mutually intend and
    agree to enter into a legally binding relationship when they both know that the
    law doesn’t recognize that relationship and, in fact, deems it unlawful,
    unenforceable, and wholly invalid? Asked differently, how could Pyfer and
    LaFleur have intended and agreed to enter into a legal marriage when they both
    knew such a marriage was illegal in Colorado? That we must treat a certain state
    law in 2003 as though it never saw the light of day doesn’t mean that we can
    somehow retroactively metamorphose Pyfer and LaFleur’s mutual intent and
    agreement in 2003.
    ¶92   Alternatively, the majority argues that the Supreme Court’s holding in
    Obergefell applies retroactively. But even assuming Obergefell’s retroactivity, it
    8
    doesn’t obviate the Sisyphean challenge presented by the common law marriage
    requirement of mutual intent and agreement to enter into the legal relationship of
    marriage.3 Obergefell may have changed our state law retroactively, but it lacks the
    power to change anyone’s intent or any couple’s agreement retroactively.
    ¶93   Significantly, the Supreme Court wisely predicted a quarter of a century ago
    that even when courts apply retroactively a new rule of law to a pending case,
    “they will find instances where that new rule, for well-established legal reasons,
    does not determine the outcome of the case.” Reynoldsville Casket Co. v. Hyde,
    
    514 U.S. 749
    , 758–59 (1995). In those instances there may be:
    (1) an alternative way of curing the constitutional violation, or (2) a
    previously existing, independent legal basis (having nothing to do
    with retroactivity) for denying relief, or (3) . . . a well-established
    general legal rule that trumps the new rule of law, which general
    rule reflects both reliance interests and other significant policy
    justifications, or (4) a principle of law, such as that of
    “finality” . . . , that limits the principle of retroactivity itself.
    3Sisyphus was “a king in classic mythology who offended Zeus and was punished
    by being forced to roll an enormous boulder to the top of a steep hill. Every time
    the boulder neared the top, it would roll back down, and Sisyphus would have to
    start over.” E.D. Hirsch, Jr. et al., The Dictionary of Cultural Literacy: What Every
    American Needs to Know 42 (1st ed. 1988).
    9
    Id. at 759.4
    In my opinion, this case fits nicely within at least two of these
    categories—categories (2) and (3).
    ¶94    First, the mutual intent and agreement requirement is a previously existing,
    independent legal basis for denying relief in this case: Pyfer cannot demonstrate
    that he and LaFleur mutually intended and agreed to enter into the legal
    relationship of marriage under Colorado law prior to Obergefell. See Colo. Const.
    art. 2, § 31; § 14-2-104.
    ¶95    Second, the general rule requiring Pyfer and LaFleur to have mutually
    intended and agreed to enter into the legal relationship of marriage, see 
    Lucero, 747 P.2d at 663
    , is well-established and reflects reliance interests and other
    significant policy considerations. Indeed, requiring mutual intent and agreement
    to enter into the legal relationship of marriage ensures that couples are on notice
    that legal consequences could flow from the relationship. Without it, someone like
    LaFleur could unwittingly enter into a marital relationship that’s explicitly
    deemed invalid by the law, only to find out more than a decade later when the
    relationship fails that he is nevertheless subject to significant legal consequences
    in a dissolution proceeding. The due process concerns inherent in this type of
    4 The Court cautioned that “simple reliance” does not suffice to create a
    retroactivity exception. Reynoldsville 
    Casket, 514 U.S. at 759
    .
    10
    after-the-fact surprise cannot be brushed aside. Yet, that’s precisely what the
    majority does. The majority dismisses LaFleur’s accurate assertion that he and
    Pyfer could not have mutually intended or agreed to enter into a legally binding
    marriage because the idea of a same-sex couple entering into a lawful marriage in
    Colorado in 2003 was unthinkable. Maj. op. ¶ 39 n.5.
    ¶96   Notably, I’m not alone in thinking that the mutual intent and agreement
    requirement throws a monkey wrench into the majority’s analysis. A panel of the
    Court of Appeals of South Carolina is in the same camp. Its recent decision in
    Swicegood v. Thompson, 
    847 S.E.2d 104
    (S.C. App. 2020), is illuminating. There, as
    here, at the time the same-sex couple agreed to live as a married couple, both
    parties were aware that state law prohibited same-sex marriage.
    Id. at 113
    .
    
    Though the court determined that the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence on
    retroactivity compelled “the conclusion Obergefell must be applied retroactively,”
    id. at 110,
    it held that retroactive application of the decision was not dispositive
    , id. at 110–12.
    In so doing, the court focused in part on the mutual intent and
    agreement requirement of common law marriage in South Carolina:
    A party . . . must at least know that his actions will render him
    married as that word is commonly understood. 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. The proponent of
    the alleged marriage has the burden of proving the elements by a
    preponderance of the evidence.
    11
    Id. at 113
    (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    Because both parties knew that South Carolina law prevented them from lawfully
    marrying in that state during their relationship, the court found that, as a matter
    of law, they “could not have formed the intent and mutual agreement to enter a
    legally binding marital relationship.”
    Id. Therefore, they could
    not have been
    common law married during that timeframe.
    Id. ¶97
      So it is here. Prior to Obergefell, Pyfer and LaFleur were both aware that they
    could not enter into the legal relationship of marriage in Colorado. Consequently,
    as a matter of law, they could not have mutually intended or agreed to be in a
    legally binding marital relationship before Obergefell. Pyfer and LaFleur could not
    have intended or agreed to enter into the legal relationship of marriage in 2003 any
    more than a driver with a revoked driver’s license can intend to drive legally.
    That’s true even if the law that prohibits driving with a revoked driver’s license is
    declared unconstitutional at some point in the future and that change is applied
    retroactively.
    ¶98   Perhaps recognizing the problems inherent in retroactively imputing to
    Pyfer and LaFleur the required intent to be legally married when they could not
    have known that their marriage would subject them to any legal consequences, the
    majority plucks a new rule out of thin air. It declares, rather paradoxically, that,
    while Pyfer and LaFleur must have intended and agreed to enter into “the legal
    12
    and social institution of marriage,” maj. op. ¶ 4 (quoting Hogsett, ¶ 49 ( emphases
    added)), they need not have intended or agreed to incur “the legal consequences of
    a marital relationship,”
    id. at ¶ 39.
    But the majority’s unprecedented and troubling
    approach begs the following question: How can a couple intend and agree to enter
    into a legal marriage without intending and agreeing to incur the legal
    consequences that flow from entering into such a marriage?
    ¶99    The majority attempts to justify its holding by speculating that “[m]any
    couples may not appreciate or intend the legal consequences of entering into a
    marital relationship, or anticipate the ways in which those consequences may shift
    over time as the law evolves.”
    Id. However, in the
    same breath that it questions
    an average couple’s awareness of the legal consequences of entering into a legal
    marital relationship, the majority unrealistically attributes to LaFleur knowledge
    of a federal court in a different state striking down a ban on same-sex marriage,
    and then unfairly penalizes him for failing to presciently anticipate that Colorado
    law would undergo a similar seismic change.
    Id. at ¶ 39
    n.5. The majority cannot
    have its cake and eat it too.
    ¶100   Moreover, even assuming that not every single couple possesses “detailed
    knowledge of and intent to obtain all the legal consequences that attach to
    marriage,” Hogsett, ¶ 54, that can hardly support the majority’s incongruous
    conclusion.    The vast majority of couples who enter into a legal marital
    13
    relationship appreciate and intend that some significant legal consequences will
    flow from that choice. Surely the majority doesn’t mean to suggest that the
    average person is unaware that entering into a legal marriage may result in the
    division of marital property, lead to an award of spousal maintenance, and
    implicate child custody and child support issues.
    ¶101   In sum, I commend the majority’s efforts to avoid perpetuating the
    exclusionary marriage regime Obergefell struck down. But giving effect to our
    common law on the mutual intent and agreement requirement in no way does so.5
    Rather, it properly guarantees that any party with exposure to a legal dissolution
    proceeding goes into a marital relationship with eyes wide open. If, in the event a
    marriage fails, someone like LaFleur may be forced to go through a legal
    dissolution proceeding and face consequences such as property division and
    spousal maintenance, we should demand that he be on notice of that up front.
    He’s entitled to be alerted by the law that if he chooses to enter into the legal
    relationship of marriage, he will be subject to the legal rights, benefits, and
    consequences that are triggered by that choice. The majority’s newly minted
    5 Post-Obergefell, same-sex couples must be allowed to enter into the lawful
    relationship of marriage. This includes same-sex couples who were unlawfully
    married pre-Obergefell.
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    framework robs LaFleur of that opportunity. To the extent he feels duped by the
    system, I can hardly blame him.
    III. Conclusion
    ¶102   Because I disagree with the majority that, post-Obergefell, a court can
    somehow transform a pre-Obergefell same-sex marital relationship in Colorado
    from one lacking legal effect to one that was legally binding from the moment of
    inception, I respectfully dissent. I would reverse and remand with instructions to
    return the case to the district court to determine whether the parties mutually
    intended and agreed to be in a legal marital relationship and were in a common
    law marriage after Obergefell was decided in June 2015.6
    6The petition for marriage dissolution at the center of this appeal was filed by
    Pyfer in January 2018, almost two and a half years after Obergefell was announced.
    15