Divorce Mexico, Haiti and Dominican Republic
Thank you for visiting our website. IS THIS LEGAL? You ask a
very good question.
The answer is, of course it's legal. Legal and illegal, however
are terms that are not very relevant. Legal and illegal apply
more to criminal law. For something to be "illegal" you
have to break aspecific law. For instance, if you rob someone you
have committed an illegal act by breaking the specific law
against robbery. On the otherhand, any thing you do which does
NOT violate a specific law isconsidered a legal act.
There is no SPECIFIC LAW against getting divorced - in the
Doiminican Republic, Haiti, Mexico or anywhere else - so there is
no question about legality.
We think what you intend to ask is this "Is the divorce
valid?" - and that's a much more interesting question. A
list of court
cases in support of this is found here court cases.
The thing that must be remembered here is that we are dealing
with an area of CIVIL LAW - NOT CRIMINAL LAW. In criminal law
things are cut and dried - you're guilty of you're not guilty. In
civil law NOTHING is cut and dried; the only question that
applies is "what wasthe ruling on this single, specific
case"?
Here's an example that will give you an idea of just how
complicated civil law can be. There was a fellow in California
who went to Nevad aand lived there the required 6 weeks before
applying for a divorce.The divorce was routinely heard by a
Nevada court that ruled that hemet the residency requirements and
granted the divorce. Shortly afterthe divorce, the fellow got
married. A short time after that, he decided to return to
California. When he got back to California, the wife he had
divorced filed suit in California court asking the court to
declare his Nevada divorce invalid because he didn't reside in
Nevada long enough to indicate he "intended to make Nevada
his permanant residence." Now, although the Nevada court had
already ruled that he HAD met the requirements necessary to
indicate he intended tomake Nevada his permanant residence, the
California court dissagreed and declared his Nevada divorce
invalid. The end result is that, in Nevada - to this day - he is
considered divorced from his first wifeand married to his second
wife. On the other hand, In California, he is considered to still
be married to his first wife!
In addition, his first wife attempted to have him arrested for
bigamy since he was married to her and another woman at the same
time.However, the state of California declined prosecution
because thebigamy statute is basically a fraud statute designed
to prevent people from getting married to a second partner while
knowing that a first marriage has not been dissolved. Therefore,
it was the opinion of the state of California that the guy was
NOT guilty of bigamy because he legitimately BELIEVED he was
divorced from the first wife at the timehe married the second
wife. What a can of worms!
So, here's the deal.
All the junk (and it is junk because it's really not relevant)
that istalked about in the information against Dominican, Mexican
or Haitian divorce is correct intheory. But all it really says is
that, IF CONTESTED, a GlobalDivorce™ MIGHT be
declared INVALID. Yeah, well, so might a Nevada divorce, a
Canadian divorce or any other divorce - in theory. However,the
assertion that a Global Divorce™ is generally not
valid oraccepted, is just pure bull.
Sure, there are some court cases where a specific court, on a
specificday, for a specific case found that a Global
Divorce™ was not valid. However, there are also
numerous cases where a court ruled that thedivorce was valid. But
the fact is, that thousands of Dominican, Mexican or Haitian
divorces are granted every year, go uncontested and are routinely
accepted as valid. We have had clients present a Global
Divorce™ decree toIRS, Social Security, Immigration and
Naturalization and about every other agency and jurisdiction you
can name and have the divorceacepted with NO PROBLEM.
So what's all the controversy about? It's about theory - the kind
ofthing lawyers just love to argue about. See, in civil law, you
can argue a case from any position and you can always sight
previous court cases where the court decided the issue in your
favor because, if it'sa question that's been around for a while -
like Dominican Divorce, Haiti or Mexico has- there are always
hundreds of court cases that were decided pro and con. That's the
nature of civil law.
Now, in the real world, it works like this:
You get a Global Divorce™ through the Dominican
Republic, Haiti or Mexico, any State in theU.S., Canada or any
other jurisdiction and it's legal as long as itwas properly done
according to the laws of the jurisdiction where itwas done and
it's also considered valid. In the case of the Global
Divorce™ do through the Dominican Republic, Haiti or
Mexico or State Court Magistrate, attaches a statement that says
the divorce is worthy of "Full Faith and Credit". At
that point it's as valid as any other divorce. And, if no one
ever challenges the divorce in court, it remains forever valid.
But what happens if someone DOES challenge the validity of a
specific Global Divorce™? THAT'S when you get into
the whole can of worms called civil law. Anything can happen -
whether you're talkingabout Global Divorce™ or
German divorce or any other type of legal action. The point is,
that Global Divorce™ is just as valid - not more so
- not less so - than a divorce issued by any otherjurisdiction.
They can all be challenged and a court can rule anythingthe judge
decides is correct on that particular day for that particular
divorce. However, that particular decision DOES NOT effect any
other divorce - only the one being challenged.
Okay, so you get a legal,
Global Divorce™ which, in the opinion ofthe U.S. Embassy or
US court in the Republic of Haiti, Mexico or Dominican Republic
is a valid and worthy of "Full Faith and Credit" . . .
that remains the case forever - unless somene wants to male a big
deal and argue it in court. That neverhappens with 99.9% of all
Global Divorces™ and the divorce is routinely honored under
COMITY (by the way, the assertion that a state is not REQUIRED to
honor the divorce under comity is correct; what they don't tell
you - and therefore mislead you about - is that states almost
always DO accept Global Divorces™ as kind of a
courtesy).
Anyway, back to challenging Global Divorce™. Who can
do that? The answer that any agency or jurisdiction that it's
presented to can saythat they won't accept it or that they
believe it's not valid. That however does NOT make the divorce
invalid - it just means that they don't accept it - it's still
valid in EVERY OTHER JUSRISDICTION and EVERY OTHER SITUATION. But
the only way to have the divorce actually declared invalid for
all purposes is to file a court case and have a judge decide.
Basically, there are only two people in the whole universe who
can do that: you and your spouse. If your spouse signed and
agreed to the divorce, there is actually only one person who can
ask for a court decision and that's YOU. Why, because under the
fairness doctrine known as "Estoppel" your spouse is
precluded from challenging the divorce since she previously
agreed to it.
So, who can create a problem? You. But why would you want to?
Just take your decree when you receive it and proceed as if it
wasgranted by any other state or jurisdiction because it's just
as valid.The odds are better than 99 out of a 100 that you'll
never have aproblem. In the extremely unlikely event that you do
have a problem and a court rules your divorce not valid, than we
will honor our guarantee that's a part of the contract you
signed. We should, however,like to say once again that we have
never - out of hundreds of Global Divorces™ done
over a nearly 10 year period - had a courtrule that a divorce was
invalid.
So relax. Forget the theoretical world of civil law where any
kind of a ruling is POSSIBLE. In the real world, as of right now,
you have a100% legal and valid divorce. It's extremely unlikely
that anything will ever occur to change that fact.
Below you will find a list of services that we offer.
Annulment/Express Drive.....................$ 1,995.00
*Divorce guaranteed within a couple of days, recorded,
certified and returned to the client within 15 Days Guaranteed
The Annulment to follow in 2 Weeks
Divorce Express.............................$ 1,895.00
*Divorce guaranteed within a couple of days, recorded,
certified and returned to the client within 15 Days Guaranteed
1-3 DAY, Mutual Consent divorce...............$1,695.00
1-3 DAY, Unilateral divorce...................$1,795.00
*Divorce guaranteed to be granted by the court in no more
than 3 business days. All paperwork certified and returned
to client usually within 12 weeks.
1 week, Mutual Consent divorce................$1,595.00
1 week, Unilateral divorce....................$1,695.00
*Divorce guaranteed to be granted by the court and client
notified in no more than 7 business days. All paperwork
certified and usually returned to client within 12 weeks.
3 week, Mutual Consent divorce................$1,495.00
3 week, Unilateral divorce....................$1,595.00
*Divorce guaranteed to be granted by the court and client
notified in no more than 21 business days. All paperwork
certified and returned to client within 12 weeks.
If you require additional verification from us, then an
'Affidavit of Divorce' can be arranged for an additional fee of
$95.00. The affidavit is not needed, nor is it part of the
divorce. It providesevidence that your divorce decree is being
processed and that it exists. You may find it useful if you plan
to remarry soon.
Internet Legal Referrals, Inc.
1-888-88Marry
If you still have questions, please call us or send email.
proxymarriage@yahoo.com
FORMS NEEDED FOR DIVORCE PAPERS
1) Information Sheet | 2) Guarantee Agreement | 3) Your Paperwork |
4) Our Paperwork | 5) Missing Spouse | 6) Spouse |
7) Settlement Agreement | 8) Optional Documentation #2 | 9) Optional Docs #2 |
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