Features of divorce with a prisoner of war or a missing person
solvedHow to properly dissolve a marriage if my husband is a prisoner of war or is considered missing? What documents are required and what is the procedure?
Answers
A marriage can be dissolved if:
- a person is in captivity — only through the court;
- a person is missing — through DRATS (when there is a court decision recognizing the person as missing).
How to dissolve a marriage if one of the spouses is in captivity:
- Prepare and file a claim with the court: at the respondent's place of residence
- or at the plaintiff's place of residence if: there are dependent children; the plaintiff cannot appear due to health reasons or other reasons.
What documents are needed:
- copy of the marriage certificate
- certificate of captivity (if available)
- children's birth certificates (if available)
- receipt for payment of the court fee
- other documents — as needed.
How to dissolve a marriage with a missing person:
- File a report with the police to search for a person who went missing as a result of war, occupation, natural disaster, etc.
- Subsequently, file an application with the court to recognize the person as missing.
The application is filed:
- at the applicant's place of residence
- or at the last known place of residence of the missing person
- or at the location of their property.
The application must state the reason for needing to declare the person missing and the circumstances of the disappearance.
The court recognizes a person as missing if there has been no information about their whereabouts at their permanent place of residence for 1 year.
After the court's decision, an application for divorce can be submitted to DRATS.
What documents are needed to dissolve a marriage with a missing person:
- copy of the marriage certificate
- court decision recognizing the person as missing
- children's birth certificates (if available)
- other documents — as needed.
The fact of the dissolution of the marriage is confirmed by a court decision, which comes into legal force 30 days after its adoption.