Good question. In general, marriages which are legally performed and valid abroad are also legally valid in the United States. The embassy or tourist information bureau of the country in which the marriage will happen is the best source of information about marriage in that country.
Not in the eyes of the law.
No you do not. The Full Faith and Credit clause of the Fourth Amendment requires states to recognize marriage from other states.
No, you are not legally married. A getting the license doesn't complete the process, it must be executed and returned.
You are already married. You can have a ceremony in California but the legal marriage took place in Las Vegas. If you apply for a marriage license in California they will ask if you have ever been married before. You must disclose that you are already married and California will not issue the marriage license.
If you were married in California, then the state of Oregon will recognize your marriage, and you cannot register as domestic partners in Oregon. If you are registered as domestic partners in California, then the state of Oregon recognizes your domestic partnership.
You need to register before you get married, or the wedding cannot take place.
I am a an American citizen, and will get married in France with a retired french citizen, how to get my marriage registed in the state of NC ?
No. Getting married means you are married in Iowa.
Of course not. In order to get married in California, they would have to lie on their marriage license application which will invalidate the license and make the marriage illegal.
Yes, all states are required by the constitution to honor the laws of another state. Hence the large uproar over gay marriages recently performed in CA. Another example is the trouble Ca. had over their taxing cars coming from other states without the Ca emissions package, the state eventually had to refund the fees collected
Jufin Mark Jansor married to Florefes Navarette
In Italy, there are two options: getting married at City Hall (civil marriage), or getting married anywhere else (religious marriage) if the officiator is legally allowed to perform a marriage.