A denied default divorce means that the court has rejected the request for the divorce based on the default of one party. This typically occurs when the party seeking the divorce fails to meet certain requirements or fails to properly serve the other party with the necessary paperwork. The denial means that the divorce process will need to be restarted or resolved in a different manner.
I filed for a divorce in Sept of 2008 but filed for a default in April of 2009 would the courts deny the entry for default and the respondent was served in Nov of 2008 if I filed it in April of 2009 being that so much time as passed or would the divorce go through in the time allowed? of six months this is in California.
No, Depending on the state, there still has to be a trial, showing your case as to why you want to be divorced. Default just means that the defendant hasn't responded to the summons, and has to have good reason to be part of the proceedings. Defaults are usually denied when you do not serve the other side correctly. Divorce is only final when you receive the signed decree of divorce from the court.
No. A person who wishes to end a marriage cannot be denied the right. The terms of a divorce petition can be contested, but eventually the decree will be granted, either under normal procedure or default laws.
A person cannot be denied a divorce, but the terms of the divorce can be contested which sometimes leads to a long and lengthy court battle. When a spouse is served with a dissolution of marriage summons and fails to respond the spouse seeking the divorce may petition the court for a motion of default. A judge will review the petition to be certain everything is in order, the judge may also choose to interview the filing spouse. After the judge is satisfied that proper procedures have been followed the divorce will be granted by default. The non-responsive spouse will be notified that the divorce has been granted and that they have forfeited their legal rights to contest any of the terms that were included in the original dissolution of marriage petition. These procedures apply whether a spouse is incarcerated, residing in another state or living outside the country. Be advised, a divorce granted by default does not relieve a spouse of the obligation of child support, that is a different issue.
The question is VERY unclear. You were denied a divorce in Los Angeles? You were married to a new spouse in Florida? (???) If you weren't divorced before you married again you have committed BIGAMY, which is a violation of the law.
Each jurisdiction has its own set of grounds for divorce. You need to check your particular one.
Because they worked for the Pope who had just denied henry his divorce.
Yes, but only through the laws of your faith, not in a secular arena.
You can be denied private loans, and grad plus loans for late payments on your credit history. If you default on a federal student loan, you will lose eligibility for all federal financial aid (including grants).
I suppose you could. But you may end up with the same problem: still a denied permanent residen alien ("green card") petition.
A divorce is not considered a human right. A marriage and a divorce are also civil actions. Under most governments, the Catholic Church has no civil authority to deny a civil divorce. More information can't be provided without knowing under what government a marriage or a divorce is being processed.
Yes, but in 20 states it will be denied even if child support is ordered. see link below
Once the divorce is final - the non-working spouse is no longer eligible for coverage. Claims would be denied. The ex would be elibible for COBRA though. For more details see http://www.steveshorr.com/dependent.definitions.htm www.steveshorr.com/cobra.htm