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cocokoi

Newbie
Oct 28, 2024
2
1
Hi,

I’ve been searching the forum but can’t find the answer to my question. If this has already been addressed, I apologize for repeating it.

I need clarification about my situation. I am in Canada with my common-law partner and our two children, and we are all Permanent Residents. I want to file for divorce now while I’m still a permanent resident. Once the divorce is granted, I will provide a copy to my ex-spouse. My ex-spouse would then file the Petition for Recognition of Foreign Divorce once I become a Canadian citizen.

Is this process acceptable under Philippine law?

Thank you for your assistance!
 
Hi,

I’ve been searching the forum but can’t find the answer to my question. If this has already been addressed, I apologize for repeating it.

I need clarification about my situation. I am in Canada with my common-law partner and our two children, and we are all Permanent Residents. I want to file for divorce now while I’m still a permanent resident. Once the divorce is granted, I will provide a copy to my ex-spouse. My ex-spouse would then file the Petition for Recognition of Foreign Divorce once I become a Canadian citizen.

Is this process acceptable under Philippine law?

Thank you for your assistance!

Why do you need it to be recognized in PH?
 
So that my ex can be free as well. I don’t think he’ll agree and sign the paperwork unless he can also benefit from it.
 
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So that my ex can be free as well. I don’t think he’ll agree and sign the paperwork unless he can also benefit from it.

Fair enough, good reasons.

As I understand it, your question is basically if you can obtain the divorce while you're a PR (before getting Canadian citizenship) so that the petition for recognition of the foreign divorce can be filed after you get citizenship. I don't know.

Bluntly, strongly recommend you consult with a PH lawyer. This is a specific enough question you should not rely on internet information from a canadian immigration board (I'd even be skeptical about PH ones).
 
I believe for it to be recognized, one of the spouses need to be a citizen of a foreign country (Canada in this case) at the time of official divorce confirmation. Check with a PH lawyer for sure.
 
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