Yes you can but you will have to go to the U.S embassy in Trinidad and file your divorce there.
File where you live. Doesn't matter where spouse lives.
Tell your spouse to come to the US, or send him the papers.
Short answer: No
it depends on where you live because some states won't allow it.
When you get a divorce ,if your spouse has moved in with you ,you can ask them to move out and if you have had a child with your ex-spouse your child lives with you or you can have shared custody of the child but if it is a teenager when you and your previous partner get a divorce you will ask them to choose who they will live with and they can either choose you or your ex-spouse or shared custody
The judge doesn't care as long as your spouse is not trespassing on property granted to YOU in the divorce. If your parents don't care if she lives on their property, that is their decision, not the court's.
Yes you can divorce a spouse that lives in Mexico if you are in the United States. The state you are in has jurisdiction. You will risk deportation because you will declare your legal status to the courts.
No. There is no law stating that you have to live apart from your spouse to file for a divorce. :)
when you file for divorce both you and wife are bound to live separately until you both get divorce from the Court. If you and spouse wants to live together and apply divorce the law will not grant divorce to you both as you are willing to live together and the question of divorce does not arise get divorce under any grounds both the parties must live separately.
Yes. You can file for divorce in the state in which you were married or the state in which you are a resident of. It does not matter that you and your spouse live in different states you just cannot file for divorce in a state that neither have you have any relation to. It would be best for you to file first, since you live in different states, to spare yourself the traveling costs and other expenses that would be associated with traveling to Texas should your spouse file first.
You would usually need to file for divorce in the state in which you were married. If your spouse lives in a different state, he can file in that state.
In most countries it is usually the same process. You must file for divorce in France and they will require that you serve them with the divorce papers and this is accomplished with your spouses signature as proof that he received the divorce papers. One thing...It DOES NOT have to be his/her signature as receiving the papers. For example if it is sent to where your spouse works any signature will do as it is understood that your spouse was the final recipient of the divorce papers. If his personal or business address is NOT KNOWN then you will be required to publish in the last city where your spouse was known to live or you believe he/she is living an article stating that you have filed for divorce. In the USA it is usually a 4-6 month process. It may vary in France.