An annulment is a lawsuit to have a court declare a marriage was invalid and the parties were never in fact married.
The grounds for an annulment vary from state to state but typically include: (1) the person seeking the annulment (the petitioner) was under age (18 years, for example) and did not have parental consent or a court order; (2) the person seeking the annulment (the petitioner) was under the influence of drugs or alcohol and did not have the capacity to consent to the marriage; (3) either party, for physical or mental reasons, was permanently impotent at the time of the marriage and the other party was not aware of the impotency; (4) the other party used fraud, duress, or force to induce the petitioner to enter into the marriage; (5) at the time of the marriage the petitioner did not have the mental capacity to consent to marriage or to understand the nature of the marriage ceremony because of a mental disease or defect; (6) the other party was divorced from a third party within the 30-day period preceding the date of the marriage ceremony, and at the time of the marriage ceremony the petitioner did not know, and a reasonably prudent person would not have known, of the divorce; and (7) the marriage ceremony took place before any waiting period (72 hours, for example) following issuance of the marriage license.
An annulment on any ground is often available only if the parties did not live together (cohabit) after the party seeking the annulment was no longer under the influence of drugs or alcohol, or learned of the facts that are the basis for the annulment sought. A marriage subject to annulment is often said to be a nullity, void, or void ab initio (void from the beginning).
The grounds for an annulment are usually found in a state’s statutes—often in the family code.
In Ohio, an annulment is a legal action that declares a marriage invalid from the beginning, as if it never occurred. Grounds for annulment in Ohio include: one party being underage without proper consent; lack of capacity to consent due to intoxication from drugs or alcohol; permanent impotence unknown to the other party; fraud, duress, or force used to obtain the marriage; lack of mental capacity to understand the marriage due to a mental condition; one party being recently divorced and the other party being unaware; and non-compliance with any mandatory waiting period after obtaining the marriage license. It is important to note that cohabitation after the discovery of the grounds for annulment can affect the ability to seek an annulment. These grounds are specified in Ohio's family law statutes, and an attorney can provide detailed guidance on the process and likelihood of obtaining an annulment based on an individual's circumstances.