live in
File for divorce in Colorado.
You file for a divorce in the state you have legal residency. It does not matter where you got married.
You must file in the county in which you currently reside and you have to have lived in that county for six months!
Yes.
No. You file where you currently live
You would file in Maryland. You always file in the state and county that you currently reside in.
You file divorce in the state in which you are a resident, regardless of where you were married. So if you are resident of TX, that's where you file for divorce.
You file for divorce in the country or jurisdiction in which you are living. Where you got married does not matter.
Your right to file for divorce is not altered by where you were married.
You file for divorce in the state where you are a legal resident, regardless of where you were married.
If they are married to you then you consult with an attorney and file a complaint for divorce in the proper court for your jurisdiction. If they are not married to you then you cannot divorce them because there is no marriage between you that can be dissolved.If they are married to you then you consult with an attorney and file a complaint for divorce in the proper court for your jurisdiction. If they are not married to you then you cannot divorce them because there is no marriage between you that can be dissolved.If they are married to you then you consult with an attorney and file a complaint for divorce in the proper court for your jurisdiction. If they are not married to you then you cannot divorce them because there is no marriage between you that can be dissolved.If they are married to you then you consult with an attorney and file a complaint for divorce in the proper court for your jurisdiction. If they are not married to you then you cannot divorce them because there is no marriage between you that can be dissolved.
You can file the divorce at anytime that you want to