A judgment of dissolution of marriage may not be entered unless one
of the parties to the marriage has been a resident of this state (CA)
for six months and of the county in which the proceeding is filed for
three months next preceding the filing of the petition.?
If you are a resident of CA, you file in CA.
"The most common mistake people make is believing they must divorce in
the state in which they were married. This is simply not true. Most
divorce cases throughout the United States are filed in the county in
which the filing spouse resides."
So, in short, you file for divorce in the state you have residency in.
If you just moved and do not have residency, you can wait out the
residency period of the state you are in and then file if you so
choose. That means you can attempt to establish residency in Clark County, Nevada if you want to file for divorce there. Nevada's residency laws are more lenient than that of California.
You file for divorce in the state where you are a legal resident, regardless of where you were married.
Yes you can as both of you are living and also got married in the U.S.A.
No, you can file in your home state.
You file for divorce in the current state your in.
You file for divorce in the state in which you reside.
You file divorce in the state in which you are a resident, regardless of where you were married. So if you are resident of TX, that's where you file for divorce.
yes. in most cases, you file for divorce in the state in which the petitioning party resides. aka, if you get married in las vegas, but your permanent residency is in vermont, you would file for divorce in vermont.
You file for a divorce in the state you have legal residency. It does not matter where you got married.
You file for divorce in the state where you are a resident, which may or may not be the state where you married.
You can file for divorce in any state and not have any problems if you do it correctly.
If a person got married in Las Vegas, NV they can legally get divorced in Arizona. The person will need to meet the requirements of Arizona to file for divorce.
You file in the state in which you are a resident, even if that was not the state where you married.
No No. No because the state or place that you get married in, that's the only place that you can that you can file a divorce in. If you think about it, it all comes to you pretty clearly.
court papers delivered legally by sheriffs
If you meet residential requirements