View Full Version : Is an anullment easier
wildone0101
Dec 17, 2007, 06:42 PM
Is an anulment easier than a divorice
drbill48
Dec 17, 2007, 07:15 PM
:) Hi, I just went through a divorce and applied for an annulment. It is my impression that they are too separate animals. Can you give me more details as I am sure I can help you. Drbill
Fr_Chuck
Dec 17, 2007, 07:31 PM
An annulment is a court action that declares basically the marriage never happened. Each state has their own rules as to what is allowed and if it is even allowed. If there is issues with property, children and the such an annulment is not possible normally. In general annulments happen when a couple were togetehr for a very short time and separate for some reason.
There is also a religiouis annulment which has nothing to do with the divorce, it is merely a religious degree that has no bearing on civil issues at court.
LearningAsIGo
Dec 18, 2007, 07:19 AM
It could depend on your area, but you may not be eligible for an annulment. Annulments only take place for marriages of a very short duration (ex: weeks, months).
George_1950
Dec 18, 2007, 10:02 PM
An annulment is ordinarily based upon some type of fraud, such as, the spouse was married, or some other lie. A divorce is a petition to terminate a marriage based upon any number of grounds, the most recent being the marriage is irretrievably broken, and/or mental cruelty. Other than that, they are about the same.
chimanb
Jul 21, 2008, 05:53 PM
An annulment is ordinarily based upon some type of fraud, such as, the spouse was married, or some other lie. A divorce is a petition to terminate a marriage based upon any number of grounds, the most recent being the marriage is irretrievably broken, and/or mental cruelty. Other than that, they are about the same.
I thoght that, with a divorce, the spouse is still entitled the alimony, child supt, etc.. but with an Annulment, there are no grounds for any kind of support. Is Adultery grounds for annullment?
N0help4u
Jul 22, 2008, 04:45 AM
Like learningasIgo said an annulment has very specific guidelines to qualify so if your marriage was a typical marriage, no fraud and has lasted more than months you would not be eligible. So unless she was cheating on you from the start and got pregnant before or as soon as you got married then I doubt you would be eligible for annulment.
George_1950
Jul 22, 2008, 08:23 AM
I thoght that, with a divorce, the spouse is still entitled the alimony, child supt, etc.., but with an Annulment, there are no grounds for any kind of support. Is Adultery grounds for annullment?
Alimony, child support, division of property, and payment of debts are issues arising in the action for divorce, where dissolving the marital relation is the issue in annulment. In either case, the parties are qualified to remarry. See: annulment - legal definition (http://www.nolo.com/definition.cfm/Term/562BEF3A-2213-4DA5-A904132021F334E5/alpha/A/) and misrepresentation - legal definition (http://www.nolo.com/definition.cfm/term/2909ADDB-0878-4F5E-AC2D4E105E748EAD)