Only if you have grounds for annulment (for example, the marriage was entered into under duress). Short-term marriage or 'buyer's remorse' is not grounds for annulment.
In most places your marriage would be annulled, and you would have to wait for that person to be legally divorced before you could remarry..
Getting the marriage legally annulled requires you to present some compelling facts regarding some very specific things such as mental illness, fraud, not getting consent to marry someone underage, bigamy, failure to consummate You need to find out what grounds forannulment the court will consider, then bring the evidence to support them. Simply being married for less than a year is not a reason. Just get divorced.
.Catholic AnswerYou would need an annulment if you wanted to get married in the Catholic Church to someone else. If you are a Catholic and you didn't get married in front of a priest you need to have the marriage validated or annulled as it wasn't a valid sacrament. According to Canon Law, Canon 1086, section 1: Marriage between two persons, one of whom is baptized in the Catholic Church or has been received into it and has not left it by means of a formal act, and the other of whom is non-baptized, is invalid.
Eleanor of Aquitaine was married to King Louis VII of France in 1137, the marriage was annulled in 1152. From 1152 until 1189 she was married to King Henry II of England. Eleanor died in 1204 at the age of 82.
No. Once someone has a marriage annulled in civil court the parties are free from each other and any subsequent marriage is valid as long as the subsequent marriage took place afterthe first marriage was annulled.A marriage that was entered while one of the parties was still married (which would be the case prior to an annulment) is null and void. A subsequent annulment of that first marriage would not "cure" the second one. The parties must arrange to get married legally.
"Marital" pertains to "marriage", and being married to someone.
NO !
The verb or marriage is marry.Other verbs are marries and married, depending on tense.Some examples are:"I will marry you"."He marries her"."I married her".
He was furious and stormed off to the Senate to try to get the marriage annulled. He claimed that Othello had used witchcraft, but really that was his racism telling him that his daughter couldn't actually love someone that colour.
No you cannot get legally married to someone who does not exists.
You're always welcome in the Catholic Church. However, if you've received a civil divorce and are married to someone else without having your first marriage annulled, you cannot receive the Sacraments because the Church still views your first marriage as valid and you, therefore, as living in a state of serious (mortal) sin.
She married someone named Thomas