No. Civil unions are not legal in the US Virgin Islands.
No. Civil unions are not legal in the Northern Mariana Islands.
No. Civil unions are not legally recognized in the Cook Islands even though they are legal in New Zealand.
The Virgin Islands were not owned by America in the Civil War so they played no part. The Virgin Islands were bought by America from the Danish on January 17 1917.
The federal trial court for the US Virgin Islands is the District Court of the United States Virgin Islands, which has two Divisions, one in St. Croix and the other in St. Thomas/St. John. This District is part of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, which is where an appeal to a decision in the trial court would be filed. The Virgin Islands' equivalent of the state court with original jurisdiction over criminal and civil cases is the Superior Court of the Virgin Islands (formerly called the Territorial Court of the Virgin Islands).
Yes, but only civil unions issued within Colorado. There is no recognition for the civil unions of other states.
No, civil unions are banned and unrecognized in Utah.
No, civil unions and domestic partnership are not legally defined in North Dakota.
No. Civil unions are not legal in American Samoa.
As of the end of 2009, twenty-four (24) civil unions had been dissolved in New Zealand. Civil Unions began there in 2005.
No. Civil unions are not recognized as marriages in West Virginia.
No. Civil unions are not legal nor recognized in the state of Nebraska.
No, civil unions and domestic partnerships are not legally defined in Oklahoma.