I share this as a caution to any mature adults who may be contemplating whether to marry or not. My best friend of over 30 yrs passed away in June. When her beloved moved into her home, he kept his out-of-state residence and continued to lease it.
They were wise in making decisions...set up a joint bank account and also kept individual accounts; created wills which clearly spelled out their wishes for funerals, distributions, and inheritances and became a heart warming model of compatibility and mutual respect and generosity to others during their over 20 yrs of co-habitation. He has 5 supportive, loving children; she had one daughter who created pure hell and bedlam during her mom's final long illness and afterwards.
The huge mistake they made was in Not sending notarized, certified copies of their wills and estate plans to their children and instead of putting them in a bank deposit box, keeping their copies, along with other important legal documents, receipts and papers in a home safe which the daughter accessed and removed.
She not only destroyed her mom's most current will (the atty who drew the wills had died and any set he would have had was lost) but she additionally disrespected her mom's final wishes about burial, instead, creamating her mom and taking the ashes with her after a horrendously destructive 5 month reign of disruption, needless pain and anguish to both my friend, her guy, and the medical team, investment groups, banks, and others as she directed the lives of all concerned while in her mom's house.
She used a much earlier will, made before my friend and partner had even met, for probate. Upon consultation with an atty., the effort to establish common law in our state will be lengthy, expensive and her partner is deciding that at his advanced age, not worth the stress, delays and open war it would create once the daughter learned of any legal pursuit.
The latter will spelled out clearly that the partner would live as long as he wished in my friend's current home as owner and at the time he chose to leave or at his death, that residence would go to the daughter. It also provided specific investments be inherited by the daughter's two children along with other provisions. Had they created joint ownership of that residence, subsequent events would have been quite different.
The daughter presented the partner with a very complex house lease agreement with many strings attached.
I share this to impress on others who are co-habitating happily and thinking that they have covered the bases for future inheritances, etc. to be sure to safeguard your individual and joint rights legally and as you intend.