I am grateful to armoured for his last 2 posts, with which I see little to take issue. Armoured usually does not post nonsense. Overall, I'll grant, much more knowledgeable about immigration matters than I.
Yes, as he says below, there was an element of misunderstanding.
I have no real idea as to how many jurisdictions allow foreigners to come for a visit, get married, then leave. I know of quite a few. I have Canadian friends who have married in places like Las Vegas, Hawaii and Mexico. So, U.S. and Mexico are two.
By way of recent personal experience, I spent some time in the Philippines in 2018, being s place I visit often. On that trip, I met a guy (let's call him "Joe") from Alberta who was there to marry a Filipina ("Jane"). He had been married there once before, in the early 1990s. He had not seen his wife since about 2000 and knew nothing of her whereabouts. He had heard she had completed training as a nurse and had moved to the U.S., but he had no more info. So, he thought he would simply get married in the Phils again and forget about the first marriage. Too much effort to try to track down his wife and to think of putting in the years and money needed for an annulment (plus the risk of it being denied). Yes, maybe finding her in the U.S. and enlisting her cooperation for a divorce there was possible, but by no means a clear path.
What Joe was unaware of is that marriages in the Phils are usually recorded with the Philippines Statistics Authority. I say "usually" because one obtains one's marriage licence locally and, once married, the presiding official will provide the couple with "Certificate of Marriage" issued by the "Office of the Civil Registrar General". I am looking at one on my computer as I write this. It's a very formal, official-looking document. But, unless the couple ensures that it is forwarded to the PSA for registration, for many practical purposes within the country, they are not regarded as married. If you are a Canadian seeking to sponsor a Filipino as a permanent resident, and you say in your application that you married in the Phils, Canada will only accept that as true if you can provide a PSA marriage certificate. The one issued by the Registrar General won't do.
So, to get married in the Phils, Joe and Jane had to take another step. They had to go to a PSA office and apply for a "cenomar" for each of them. It is required before you can get a marriage licence. It means "Certificate of No Marriage". The PSA will search its records and see if there is a record of any previous marriage. Well, wouldn't you know that Joe's marriage from 25 years ago turned up. Cenomar refused. I do not know if Canada required PSA marriage certificates 25 years or so ago, but it never came up for Joe since he never tried to bring Jane to Canada. He was working in the oil sands and Jane had no inclination to move there. So Joe made regular visits to the Phils to be with her. That's probably why they drifted apart, due to the long distance and long absences.
Next came the plan to marry away from the Phils. Not an easy trick for Filipinos, since many countries (eg. Canada) require a visa to enter. One can go online and get a list of countries a Filipino can enter on a Phils passport. Thailand is one. I became involved in the research. Kind of intriguing. Corresponding with lawyers and such was not Joe's forte. So I did some for him. I corresponded with a law firm in Bangkok, a firm I came across through one of its members on a visit there in the past. They sent email, which I still have, advising:
Here are the documents required to proceed with the marriage registration in Thailand:
1.Affirmation of Freedom to Marry or Certificate of No Impediment (You will obtain this document from your embassy in Bangkok only).
2. Certified copy of your passport by your embassy in Thailand
3. Divorce or Death Certificate if you had been married before which ended in either divorce or spousal death. Must be in English or Thai.
Item # 1 requires the Canadian to appear at the Canadian embassy and complete an affidavit of the sort best described on this Phils Canadian embassy website. The embassy in Bangkok explains it too, but the one here is more thorough.
https://www.canadainternational.gc.ca/philippines/consular_services_consulaires/marriage-mariage.aspx?lang=eng
It is interesting to note, as set out there, that Canada, unlike the Phils, has no central registry of marriages. The Canadian government, unlike the Phils, has no way of checking one's marital status, hence it does not issue the equivalent of a cenomar.
Long story short, Joe and Jane went to Thailand, got married and now live in Canada. What Joe did with Jane is quite a different scenario from a discussion about the same couple marrying twice and the propriety of so doing. Joe had to swear a false affidavit. He is, in fact and in law, still married to his partner from the 1990s. Some risks were and are involved. Whether any will ever materialize and cause a problem is unlikely, but possible.
I'll add that Thailand was not the only possibility for marriage. From time there and knowing an attorney there, I was aware that Belize is equally accommodating of foreigners. I emailed my contact there. He wrote back, encouraging Joe and Jane to marry there. My lawyer friend could do it all himself. Lawyers there can marry people. We ruled it out because of the difficulty of travel to Belize. One usually has to touch down in the U.S. first. A Filipino needs a U.S. transit visa just to do that. Thailand was a lot closer and less difficult and expensive to travel there.
A final thought on this. I have not been in contact with Joe and Jane for some time. I did suggest to him way back that as a foreigner, he can divorce someone he married in the Phils, by taking divorce proceedings in Canada, and the divorce will be recognized there. At the time, he just wanted to get things done, to start the sponsorship/application process without delay and more trips back and forth and working through trying to divorce someone who cannot be found or undertake what would be necessary to find her. He should perhaps consider doing so now, if there are any lingering concerns. Get a divorce and marry Jane here in Canada.
As a point of interest, here is what my attorney friend in Belize says is required to marry there, which I note seems to suggest that proxy marriages are legal and recognized there:
Please note that in order to proceed with a marriage, at least one of the partners must be located in Costa Rica. |
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Documentation required for this process is detailed as follow:
- Birth certificates: of each party, duly apostilled if it comes from abroad.
- Certificate of Marital status for Costa Rican nationals or Affidavit of single status for foreign nationals.
- Scanned copy of the bio-page of passports: original passports with entry stamp (or residence ID) will be required on the day of the ceremony.
- POA: if one of the partners is abroad.
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Important notes:
- All documents in other languages than Spanish must be translated by a sworn translator in Costa Rica.
- All documents are required in original.
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