Law Office of Bryan Fagan PLLC Podcast
Can a marriage be legally erased? It's one of the most misunderstood questions in Texas family law — and in this episode, we separate the myth from the statute. An annulment doesn't end a marriage the way divorce does: divorce ends a valid marriage while recognizing it existed, but an annulment declares the marriage void, as if it never legally happened. We walk through what that distinction actually means, including void marriages that are invalid from the outset under Texas law, and why annulments are far rarer than most people expect. The heart of the episode is the seven legal grounds Texas recognizes for annulment — strict hurdles that include underage marriage, intoxication at the time of the ceremony, impotency, fraud or duress, mental incapacity, concealed divorce, and marrying too soon after a prior divorce — plus the timing rules that decide these cases, like the 72-hour rule after a marriage license is issued and the 30-day windows that can bar a claim entirely. We also cover the practical realities most people overlook: children born during an annulled marriage are still legally protected, with custody and support handled through a SAPCR (Suit Affecting the Parent-Child Relationship), and property acquired together still has to be divided. Finally, we walk through the legal process itself — evaluating your eligibility against the statutory grounds, filing a petition in district court, serving your spouse, and presenting evidence at a hearing — and why the evidence burden makes an experienced attorney so valuable in these cases. The bottom line: annulment is a narrow legal remedy, not an easy exit, and knowing whether annulment or divorce is your true path is the first strategic decision. For families across Texas, the Law Office of Bryan Fagan, PLLC offers free, confidential consultations. Learn more at bryanfagan.com.
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