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Annulment is a legal procedure that dissolves a marriage as if it had never happened. A marriage can be annulled for various reasons depending upon particular circumstances and state laws. However, a marriage may generally be annulled in the following situations: 1) where the marriage between the parties is prohibited by law; 2) where either party was impotent at the time of marriage; or 3) where either party had a husband or a wife living at the time of the marriage, unless they cohabited after the death or marriage dissolution of the former spouse of such party; or 4) where either party was a ward under a guardianship and was found by the Court to lack the capacity to contract a valid marriage. Please see specific state for details and/or differences.
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... all other human beings in an official capacity as bearers of rights and entitlements, as embedded... an outsider's perspective what exactly a marriage between equals would entail; for example, specifyi... draws on individuals' subjection to a legal system (even if these persons are not recognized a...
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...We argue in this Article for legally enshrining the conjugal view of marriage, using ar...But lacking the capacity for organic bodily union, it cannot be valuable sp...
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... rights, racial equality, gay marriage, and bioethics. Judges and scholars treat dignity as an important legal value, but they usually do not explain what it mea... that derives from man's reason, a capacity he enjoys in contrast to other living things. (48)...
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... alia,"[h]is commitment in a private capacity to the interestsof others." Nev. Rev. Stat. §281A...; is related by blood, adoption, or marriage to the officer; employs the officer or a member of... 528 (1935) ("[A]public official cannot legally participate in his official ------ 3 We have he...
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..." hold uniform, negative views of marriage, reproduction, sexuality, or family; or that activ... church and her gradual discovery of her capacity to make a special contribution to the women's move...Since completing her legal education, Agnes has worked to improve women's leg...
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...POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS A. Marriage B. Collective Responsibility Towards Pregnant Wome... preglimony? Under current law, a man has no legal obligation towards a woman with whom he conceives ... for women only if they retain full work capacity during the period of pregnancy and childbirth. A p...
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One of the issues that arose after the Iowa Supreme Court’s decision in Varnum v. Brien, which held that Iowa’s Constitution would not permit Iowa to limit the institution of marriage to opposite-sex couples, regards how the state should treat different types of same-sex unions from other states. Some of the most interesting and important concerns center around the status Iowa will give to out-of-state civil unions and domestic partnerships, relationships that receive legal recognition but are not true marriages in their states of origin. Since federal law (the Full Faith and Credit Clause and the Federal Defense of Marriage Act) and choice-of-law principles allow Iowa to recognize out-of-state, same-sex relationships, Iowa courts and legislators must now look to statutory l...
... understood individual states to have the capacity to set national policy goals. 37 Scholars have so...
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... same-sex couples' successful bids for marriage equality in a handful of states (2) to the public'..., the latter of which she defines as the capacity to "participat[e] in the lives of others" (p. xix)... nevertheless extremely seductive for those legal actors who aspire to read legal history as reflect...
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... prohibited the recognition of any "other legal union that is treated as marriage or the substanti...(222) . The linear and capacity-limited "old media" required viewers and listeners...