Your country clerk's office or attorney will be able to give you details.
GA doesn't have a remarriage waiting period. You can get married the next day.
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.
You file for divorce in the state where you are a legal resident, regardless of where you were married.
If you want a divorce, you file for a divorce in the state where you are a resident.
You file for divorce in the state where you are a legal a resident, regardless of where you got married. TX requires that you have been a resident of the state for at least 6 months in order to file for divorce there.
You file in the state in which you are a resident, even if that was not the state where you married.
No, but your residency will affect where you file for divorce. You must file in the state where you are a current resident.
Where they live
You file for divorce in the state where you are a resident, which may or may not be the state where you married.
No. You cannot file for divorce in GA if you are not a resident of the state. You would file in FL (despite the fact that you not married in FL).
You always file for divorce in the place you are currently a resident.
Massachusetts.
In the US you file for divorce in the state in which you are a resident, regardless of if you were married in that state or not