it gets nullified
If you get a written agreement.
As regards What?
As long as you are legally divorced you can get a marriage even the next day.
Do you care? You want a divorce don't you.
annullment can only happen within the first year of marraige, after that is divorce
When Roman Catholics enter a marriage, it is without intention of divorce and is a permanent commitment for life. Should divorce happen, the Catholic is not free to remarry unless the marriage is proven invalid by the church through the annulment process. The Catholic may still receive the sacraments..Catholic AnswerRoman is an epithet first commonly used in England after the protestant revolt to describe the Catholic Church. It is never used by the Catholic Church. .Sometimes a divorce is recommended in instances where there needs to be a legal separation between a husband and a wife, this is something that you should consult your confessor or pastor about. However, as noted above, a divorced person is not free to marry, the divorce is only obtained for another purpose, such as protected a wife from an abusive relationship.
The NY marriage is not valid. You can also be prosecuted for bigamy, if they wanted to go that route.
The status of a woman who has left or been put out of a marriage depends on the way the marriage ended. A divorce was really not possible for most circumstances, and rarely happened. Ending a marriage with an annulment, however, did happen, and in such a case the marriage was considered for purposes of law and Church never to have happened. An example of a marriage that ended with annulment was the marriage between Eleanor of Aquitaine and King Louis VII of France. All the possessions in her dowry were returned to her, and she immediately married King Henry II of England. King Louis VII declared the children of the marriage to be legitimate, which was required because the children of an annulled marriage would otherwise not be considered legitimate. He also remarried.
until you get divorce from the court you both are still said to be in marriage.
I am assuming that you mean "invalid" marriage, and that the marriage was annulled, as might happen on rare occasions in the Roman Catholic Church. If a marriage is annulled, it is declared to have been "invalid" right from the start, and can be considered as if it never happened. In this case a woman can certainly marry. Re-marry is the wrong term except in the eyes of the civil law, perhaps, which might or might not recognize the annulment. In the eyes of the church (staying with this example) she was in fact never married. So there is no conflict between church and civil law, as long as a civil divorce took place if it was required by the state.
Usually a house is part of the divorce since it was bought while there was a marriage. This means that both of you have an interest in the house. You will have to settle with your husband what will happen with the house.
The marriage would not be considered legal and the man could be charged with the criminal offense of bigamy.