Why
Wait For a Lengthy Philippines Annulment?
CHEAPEST and FASTEST anywhere!
Divorce
has never been this fast. There is only a 7 day stay in Guam required
and no waiting period or hearing!
Get
a fast divorce through our Simplified
Divorce Program, filed in Guam, a United States territory. Our
process is extremely fast, since divorces are not available in
the Philippines.
Both parties may now reside in the Philippines or elsewhere, and
may have been married in any state or nation.
.
Guam
Validity
We have a signed legal opinion
from an attorney verifiyng that this is valid in all 50 states. Start
the Quick Divorce Process - After
reviewing the information on the Simplified
Divorce Program page, complete the Questionnaire. Our office
will type the documents for both parties to sign, usually within
24 hours of receiving the completed questionnaire and will e-mail
or mail them to you.
To qualify
for a Simplified Divorce pursuant to a Philippine attorney's opinion, Filipino citizens must meet one (1) of
the following requirements:
I. One party is a citizen of the Philippines and the other party
is a U.S. citizen or a citizen of another country; or
II. Classical neuroses, psychoses and other personality disorders
known to psychologists that render a person psychologically unfit
to assume and perform the roles of marriage;
III. If both parties are citizens of the Philippines, you may obtain
a valid divorce if: a. One party was psychologically incapacitated
(incurable) at the time of the marriage and unable to fulfill the
rights and obligations of the marriage, because of:
1. homosexuality or lesbianism;
2. satyriasis in men or nymphomania in women (excessive and promiscuous
sexual hunger);
3. extremely low intelligence;
4. immaturity, ie. the lack of an effective sense of rational judgment
and responsibility, such as refusal of the husband to support the
family or excessive dependence on parents or peer group approval;
5. epilepsy, with permanently recurring mal-adaptive manifestations;
6. habitual alcoholism;
7. criminality, or the condition by which a person consistently
gets in trouble with the law or with socially established norms
of conduct;
8. Wife's refusal to dwell with the husband after the marriage without
fault on the part of the husband;
9. Wife's refusal to have sex with the husband after the marriage
without fault on the part of the husband;
10. Wife's refusal to have children with the husband after the marriage
without fault on the part of the husband; 11. When either party
labors under an affliction that makes common life as husband and
wife impossible or unbearable, such as compulsive gambling or unbearable
jealousy on the part of either party, or any other psychic or psychological
causes;
12. In manifestation of sociopathic anomalies in husband, such as
sadism, or infliction of physical violence on the wife, constitutional
laziness, or indolence, drug dependence or addiction, or some kind
of psychosexual anomaly; or, b. If both parties are citizens of
the Philippines they may also qualify for a Simplified Divorce in
the following instances:
13. When the marriage is contracted by any party below the age of
18;
14. When marriage was solemnized by a person not legally authorized
to perform marriages;
15. When the marriage was solemnized without a marriage license;
16. Bigamous or polygamous marriage;
17. Mistake as to the identity of one of the parties;
18. If a prior marriage was annulled, but registration requirements
had not been complied with;
19. Marriage between ascendants or descendants of any degree;
20. Marriage between brothers and sisters;
21. Marriages between collateral blood relatives, up to fourth civil
degree;
22. Marriages between step-parents and step-children;
23. Marriages between parents-in-law and children-in-law;
24. Marriages between adopting parent and the adopted child;
25. Marriages between surviving spouse of the adopting parent and
adopted child;
26. Marriages between surviving spouse of the adopting parent and
the adoptor;
27. Marriages between adopted child and a legitimate child of the
adopter;
28. Marriages between adopted children of the same adopter;
29. Marriages between parties where one killed the other person's
spouse or his/her spouse