C
cortopar
Guest
I have spent 3 years researching the Catholic Church, history, the fathers, theology, and because it pertains to my wife and I, annulments. I have read Catholic forums, Diocesan Tribunal web sites, canon lawyer commentaries.
All that is to say, I thought I clearly understood the Ligamen or Prior Bond annulment process. I was wrong.
The church does not “presume” that first marriages are valid. You have to PROVE they were. You basically fill the role of “defender of the bond” for your ex-spouses first marriage.
You not only need proof that a marriage took place, and proof of their subsequent civil divorce. But you also need to get a signed and notarized affidavit from your ex-spouse or their first spouse, or alternately from the mother/father of each that it was a first marriage for both of them, that neither one of them were Catholic at the time of their marriage, or that if either of them (but not both) were Catholic, that they did get an exemption from their bishop and/or later had their marriage convalidated.
If you cannot get that affidavit, or any of those conditions are not true, the marriage (their first) is automatically assumed invalid and your annulment must become a “Formal Case.”
Forget about not having to contact your ex-spouse and beg for their assistance. In all likelihood, you will.
I’m not saying this to vent anger, but only so that someone else doesn’t get their hopes up about a 3-6 week “administrative process” when they are, in fact, in for the full year or more annulment process.
Good luck and God bless,
Bob
All that is to say, I thought I clearly understood the Ligamen or Prior Bond annulment process. I was wrong.
The church does not “presume” that first marriages are valid. You have to PROVE they were. You basically fill the role of “defender of the bond” for your ex-spouses first marriage.
You not only need proof that a marriage took place, and proof of their subsequent civil divorce. But you also need to get a signed and notarized affidavit from your ex-spouse or their first spouse, or alternately from the mother/father of each that it was a first marriage for both of them, that neither one of them were Catholic at the time of their marriage, or that if either of them (but not both) were Catholic, that they did get an exemption from their bishop and/or later had their marriage convalidated.
If you cannot get that affidavit, or any of those conditions are not true, the marriage (their first) is automatically assumed invalid and your annulment must become a “Formal Case.”
Forget about not having to contact your ex-spouse and beg for their assistance. In all likelihood, you will.
I’m not saying this to vent anger, but only so that someone else doesn’t get their hopes up about a 3-6 week “administrative process” when they are, in fact, in for the full year or more annulment process.
Good luck and God bless,
Bob