Annulments
If you are seeking an annulment, contact an attorney immediately as time is
of the essence. If you wait to file for an annulment, you may find that it is
too late.
An annulment is an action sought to void a marriage that is not valid. However,
a valid marriage can only be terminated through a dissolution proceeding. How
and if a marriage can be annulled depends on many factors. Additionally, marriages
that are void can be challenged by anyone. Conversely, other marriages that
are merely voidable can only be attacked by one of the parties in the marriage.
In order to petition the court for an annulment of a avoidable marriage, the
person seeking the annulment must be the innocent party.
Void Marriages
- Bigamy- If one of the parties to a marriage has a living spouse and has
not obtained a divorce then the subsequent marriage is void.
- Insanity, Intoxication, or Incapacity: As in any contractual situation,
persons entering into a valid marriage must have the mental and physical capacity
to contract. However, if a person who was lacking the capacity to contract
affirms the marriage while lucid, then the marriage may become valid.
- Homosexual and Transexual Persons: In Florida, the law prohibits marriages
between persons of the same sex or between a postoperative transsexual person
and a person of the gender that was attributed to the transsexual at birth.
Voidable Marriages
An innocent party can seek to void a voidable marriage on the following grounds:
- Fraud - A party who has been the victim of fraud and deception which induced
the marriage may file and obtain a decree of annulment so long as the marriage
has not been consummated by cohabitation or the victim has not engaged in
any condonation of the fraud or any affirmation of the marriage.
- Duress and undue influence - A marriage secured as a result of an unlawful
or improper act that destroys a party’s volition is voidable. Duress
does not exist if the party freely consents to the marriage at some state
prior to the ceremony.
- Consanguinity - A person is not allowed to marry his or her brother, sister,
aunt, uncle, nephew or niece, father, or mother. Courts have not ruled on
grandparent and grandchild.
- Impotence - Impotence renders a marriage voidable.
The above is not legal advice. That can only come from a qualified attorney
who is familiar with all the facts and circumstances of a particular, specific
case and the relevant law. See Terms
of Use.
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