If you live in New York and that's where the divorce is filed for, then it will depend on what New York's community property laws are, not Palestine's.
Yes. Any person is free to maintain their married name after a divorce. That would be their choice.Yes. Any person is free to maintain their married name after a divorce. That would be their choice.Yes. Any person is free to maintain their married name after a divorce. That would be their choice.Yes. Any person is free to maintain their married name after a divorce. That would be their choice.
I WAS MARRIED IN ANTIGUA IN 2005.. I WOULD LIKE TO GET A DIVORCE FROM MY HUSBAND. I AM LIVING IN CANADA AND WOULD LIKE TO DIVORCE HIM FROM WITHIN CANADA. HE IS LIVING IN ANTIGUA. CAN I ALSO GET SPOUSAL SUPPORT FROM HIM?
Yes, the couple would still be legally married because the divorce is not finalized.
Since you had the certificate for the first divorce for the second divorce, I would assume that all you would need is the second divorce certificate.
You file for divorce in the current state your in.
You need a divorce!
He can file for divorce but I doubt any judge would grant alimony.
No. Until your divorce is finalized by the court, you are still married. Getting married to a different person during your divorce proceedings would be bigamy.
You can get a divorce in another state from where you were married if you or your soon to be ex are a resident of the state. So, in your case, you would need to meet the residency requirements for Indiana to be able to file for divorce there.
Typically you would file for divorce in your country of residence.
The filing of any divorce requires residency, not where you were 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).