Want this question answered?
Ask her.
Check with your attorney to see if the papers are served. Or check with the server that you used to serve the wife. When the divorce papers are served the server has to report it to court that the papers have been served so check the court records if your attorney is not available to answer your questions.
Yes, he served her with divorce papers while in the hospital. His second wife was with him. She was having non-cancerous tumors removed, the cancer had already been cut out.
If you haven't been served with divorce papers, then you aren't divorced no matter what he says.
Bishop Trotter has NEVER been married. He has been waiting for the right women. Im reading an article now and it's saying he has NEVER been married
The divorce will still be processed by the petitioner. Not signing does not mean anything..just prolongs the procedure.
If your spouse is served with divorce papers, that is what matters. The next step is the hearing before the judge. Your spouse may attend or may choose not to attend. It does not matter. What matters is the judge's decree. Many divorces have been granted when the spouse refused to sign.
Typically if a spouse refuses to sign the divorce papers (a more popular problem than you may think) the court will treat their lack of response as an agreement to your response. You can get a divorce without their consent.
It means the decree has been entered and the divorce has been granted.
Forgiveness is more likely if you are not violating any divorce decree or court orders. It may be easier to do so before the divorce happens, so that you are not bound by a 100 mile ruling. Once you are there, you can divorce and stay where you are working.
How would it happen that you would have no knowledge of this impending divorce? You have to be served with papers, for starters. That should be a clue. Every effort has to be made to notify you of the divorce action before it can be continued without you. Once you have been served, you have knowledge. If you ignored this, never answered the requests for court appearance, etc., in some states it means the divorce is granted to the petitioner by default. Unless you are in "hiding" so that no one can contact you (and you'll eventually need to explain that one), it is pretty hard for a divorce to go through with no input from you.
Definitely Yes. As long as at least one party meets the Texas residency requirements, both parties are aware of the divorce, and the respondent has been properly served, the divorce can be consummated in Texas.