Yes
You can divorce in the state you live in, if you meet the divorce residency requirements. If he or she files in one state, you will need an attorney in that state.
You're kidding, right? If you are still married, you can not legally marry another! No one cares if you have a divorce in progress or not. It's like being pregnant; you are either married (can't legally marry another) or you or divorced. There is no in between.
No. States cooperate with one another in law, so if you are prohibited from obtaining a marriage license and/or remarrying in the state in which the divorce is pending, you are also prohibited in every other state in the union. Does this apply in Australian law?
No. If your divorce requires that you wait six months under your state law you cannot circumvent the law by moving to another state.No. If your divorce requires that you wait six months under your state law you cannot circumvent the law by moving to another state.No. If your divorce requires that you wait six months under your state law you cannot circumvent the law by moving to another state.No. If your divorce requires that you wait six months under your state law you cannot circumvent the law by moving to another state.
No, not in the United States. If your prior divorce was 'overturned' by that state court then your subsequent marriage was not valid.
No.No.No.No.
i believe it depends on the laws of the states in which you are divorcing, and/or marrying, if it is one in the same it is dependant on the state divorce laws
If you marry an illegal, that person is considered a citizen. But when you divorce that person their citizenship is revoked. STATED BY AUTHOR
Yes. I am not sure from your question whether you, a CA resident, would be filing for divorce in another state or whether your ex-spouse is filing for divorce in another state. Either way, divorces filed in other state are valid so long as they comport with the divorce laws of that particular state. One of the main requirements in most jurisdictions is a residency requirement, so that the person seeking divorce must be a legal resident of the state before he or she can obtain a divorce there. Put differently, you or your ex-spouse (whichever one is filing for the divorce) must be a resident of the state they are filing for the divorce in. However, this requirement is sometimes quite short, as low as six weeks.
If you get re-married before you have legally been divorced then you are committing bigamy. A crime in many countries and states.
In the US, multiple marriages are not recognized. One must first legally divorce from one spouse in order to marry another individual.
Not necessarily. There's no law that says you have to divorce in the same state that you were married in, or even the same country. In order to file for divorce in one of the United States, however, you must meet that state's residency requirement. If you live in Iowa, then you cannot go to another state to file for divorce. A typical residency requirement is one year. Most people are not willing to move to another state and live there for a year just so they can divorce there. If you live in, say, North Dakota and you travelled to Iowa to marry, then returned to North Dakota, it will be very difficult for you to divorce, since North Dakota will not recognize your marriage even for the purpose of dissolving it. A same-sex couple must divorce in a state that recognizes their marriage, but only the spouse who files the divorce petition is required to meet that state's residency requirement. One notable exception is Washington DC, which waives the residency requirement for out-of-state same-sex couples who married in DC.