Uncontested
Easy Annulment - This
is when both parties agree to sign the papers.
Decision
in about 3 weeks!
Cost -
$650 for our typing services plus a court filing/handling fee $169.
Papers can be e-mailed to you from our office normally within 48
hours.
Complaint
Nevada Annulment -
This is used when the other party is not willing to sign or cannot
be located.
This case takes between 6-12 weeks depending on service.
Cost - $850 for our typing services, plus a court filing/handling fee of
$169 and service fee of either: $75 for personal service, or $75
due diligence search if the party cannot be served and publication
of at least $100.
Start
the Easy Annulment Process
- Complete a Questionnaire.
Submit on-line or fax to (775) 322-5583. You should receive your
typed papers in approximately 48 hours.
An
annulment dissolves the marriage as though it never occurred in
the first place and both spouses are returned to their prior marital
status. You will need a copy of your marriage certificate for the
process. If you are currently
serving in the military and your military home state (state of record)
is Nevada, you may file for an annulment or divorce in Nevada even
if now residing in another state. You may wish to check with your
command officer to verify the correct state is listed on your LES.
You may qualify for an easy annulment if:
You were married in Nevada even if both spouses reside in other
states; or,
You or your spouse reside in Nevada; or
You are currently serving in the military and your military
home state (state of record) is Nevada;
If an affidavit
from a third party is used to substantiate your claims we charge
$50 for each.
Judges do not require a court appearance.
QUALIFICATIONS
There are a number of reasons that may qualify for an annulment.
We include several of these in Qualifications.
Since these actions are somewhat more complicated, you may wish
to call us toll free at 1-888-326-8876 to discuss your specific
circumstances after you have reviewed the qualifications list.
Grounds for an easy annulment include:
a marriage that was void at the time performed (such as blood
relatives, bigamy),
a marriage that lacked consent (such as intoxication, insanity,
underage), or
a marriage based on some kind of fraud. Fraud generally involves
one party misrepresenting some material fact to the other party,
and that other party having relied on that misrepresentation as
a basis for the marriage. To file an action based on fraud, you
must have immediately separated from your spouse as soon as you
learned of the fraud. NRS 124.340. This is true for lack of consent
circumstances as well. You cannot cohabitate after discovery of
the fraud. The longer the marriage continued from the time consent
was possible or fraud was discovered, the less likely the court
will be to grant your request.