expatforums
Go Back   expatforums > Immigration & Visas > US Marriage based Visas > Marriage in US or France?
US Marriage based Visas US immigration forum for spouses of American citizens. This is a gateway to the alt.visa.us.marriage-based newsgroup. Please read the FAQ's before posting.

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
Old 12-30-2003, 04:00 PM   #1 (permalink)
Luke & Christiane
 
Posts: 6
Default Marriage in US or France?

Hello All -

I'm American and my fiancée is French. She is here on a 6 month
tourist visa. We will have a church wedding in France in June, and are
trying to figure out whether to get married legally in the US before
she returns to France in March or to have the legal ceremony in France
just before the church wedding. If all goes as planned, I will be able
to spend the next year in France. We eventually intend to live in the
US.

I called the French consulate in New York, and a woman there
recommended that we marry in the US because to marry in France would
require that I have a carte de sejour or some such thing. But I would
sooner trust someone with actual experience. We've seen posts in this
group to the contrary: that because of Direct Consular Filing (a
concept I haven't yet mastered) we would be better off marrying in
France.

If anyone could offer any advice we would be grateful.

Many thanks,

Luke and Christiane
 

Old 12-30-2003, 04:32 PM   #2 (permalink)
Rete
 
Posts: 9736
Default Re: Marriage in US or France?

Why would you not believe a French representative to know the marriage
requirements for their own country? Yes many foreign countries require
a certificate of eligibility to marry, i.e. a certificate that states
you have never been married, etc. A not so easy thing to get in the US
but can be obtained usually at the Secretary of State for your State or
Commonwealth.



As for direct consular filing in Paris when you are ready, it does
NOT matter where your marriage took place. As long as you are
legally wed in the eyes of the US government, that is all that
matters on that front.



Rete





Originally posted by Luke & Christiane

    > Hello All -


    > I'm American and my fiancée is French. She is here on a 6 month

    > tourist visa. We will have a church wedding in France in June, and are

    > trying to figure out whether to get married legally in the US before

    > she returns to France in March or to have the legal ceremony in France

    > just before the church wedding. If all goes as planned, I will be able

    > to spend the next year in France. We eventually intend to live in the

    > US.


    > I called the French consulate in New York, and a woman there

    > recommended that we marry in the US because to marry in France would

    > require that I have a carte de sejour or some such thing. But I would

    > sooner trust someone with actual experience. We've seen posts in this

    > group to the contrary: that because of Direct Consular Filing (a

    > concept I haven't yet mastered) we would be better off marrying in

    > France.


    > If anyone could offer any advice we would be grateful.


    > Many thanks,


Luke and Christiane

__________________
Posted via http://britishexpats.com
 
Old 12-31-2003, 03:56 AM   #3 (permalink)
Luke & Christiane
 
Posts: 6
Default Re: Marriage in US or France?

A carte de sejour is a permission to live in France - it's a very
different sort of thing. And as far as the official is concerned, her
opinion was unsubstantiated; that's not strong enough for me. I was
hoping someone who had direct experience with this situation in France
might be able to help.

Thanks,
Luke and Christiane

Rete <member167@british_expats.com> wrote in message news:<>...
    > Why would you not believe a French representative to know the marriage
    > requirements for their own country? Yes many foreign countries require
    > a certificate of eligibility to marry, i.e. a certificate that states
    > you have never been married, etc. A not so easy thing to get in the US
    > but can be obtained usually at the Secretary of State for your State or
    > Commonwealth.
    >
    >
    >
    > As for direct consular filing in Paris when you are ready, it does
    > NOT matter where your marriage took place. As long as you are
    > legally wed in the eyes of the US government, that is all that
    > matters on that front.
    >
    >
    >
    > Rete
    >
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > Originally posted by Luke & Christiane
    >
    > > Hello All -
    >
    > >
    >
    > > I'm American and my fiancée is French. She is here on a 6 month
    >
    > > tourist visa. We will have a church wedding in France in June, and are
    >
    > > trying to figure out whether to get married legally in the US before
    >
    > > she returns to France in March or to have the legal ceremony in France
    >
    > > just before the church wedding. If all goes as planned, I will be able
    >
    > > to spend the next year in France. We eventually intend to live in the
    >
    > > US.
    >
    > >
    >
    > > I called the French consulate in New York, and a woman there
    >
    > > recommended that we marry in the US because to marry in France would
    >
    > > require that I have a carte de sejour or some such thing. But I would
    >
    > > sooner trust someone with actual experience. We've seen posts in this
    >
    > > group to the contrary: that because of Direct Consular Filing (a
    >
    > > concept I haven't yet mastered) we would be better off marrying in
    >
    > > France.
    >
    > >
    >
    > > If anyone could offer any advice we would be grateful.
    >
    > >
    >
    > > Many thanks,
    >
    > >
    >
    > Luke and Christiane
 
Old 12-31-2003, 11:53 AM   #4 (permalink)
Lpdiver
 
Posts: 1048
Default Re: Marriage in US or France?

Have you check the French embassy website?



Originally posted by Luke & Christiane

    > A carte de sejour is a permission to live in France - it's a very

    > different sort of thing. And as far as the official is concerned, her

    > opinion was unsubstantiated; that's not strong enough for me. I was

    > hoping someone who had direct experience with this situation in France

    > might be able to help.


    > Thanks,

    > Luke and Christiane


    > Rete <member167@british_expats.com> wrote in message
    > news:<>...

    > > Why would you not believe a French representative to know the
    > marriage

    > > requirements for their own country? Yes many foreign countries
    > require

    > > a certificate of eligibility to marry, i.e. a certificate that
    > states

    > > you have never been married, etc. A not so easy thing to get in
    > the US

    > > but can be obtained usually at the Secretary of State for your
    > State or

    > > Commonwealth.

    > >

    > >

    > >

    > > As for direct consular filing in Paris when you are ready, it
    > does

    > > NOT matter where your marriage took place. As long as you
    > are

    > > legally wed in the eyes of the US government, that is all
    > that

    > > matters on that front.

    > >

    > >

    > >

    > > Rete

    > >

    > >

    > >

    > >

    > >

    > > Originally posted by Luke & Christiane

    > >

    > > > Hello All -

    > >

    > > >

    > >

    > > > I'm American and my fiancée is French. She is here on a 6
    > month

    > >

    > > > tourist visa. We will have a church wedding in France in June,
    > and are

    > >

    > > > trying to figure out whether to get married legally in the US
    > before

    > >

    > > > she returns to France in March or to have the legal ceremony
    > in France

    > >

    > > > just before the church wedding. If all goes as planned, I will
    > be able

    > >

    > > > to spend the next year in France. We eventually intend to live
    > in the

    > >

    > > > US.

    > >

    > > >

    > >

    > > > I called the French consulate in New York, and a woman
    > there

    > >

    > > > recommended that we marry in the US because to marry in France
    > would

    > >

    > > > require that I have a carte de sejour or some such thing. But
    > I would

    > >

    > > > sooner trust someone with actual experience. We've seen posts
    > in this

    > >

    > > > group to the contrary: that because of Direct Consular Filing
    > (a

    > >

    > > > concept I haven't yet mastered) we would be better off
    > marrying in

    > >

    > > > France.

    > >

    > > >

    > >

    > > > If anyone could offer any advice we would be grateful.

    > >

    > > >

    > >

    > > > Many thanks,

    > >

    > > >

    > >

    > Luke and Christiane

__________________
Posted via http://britishexpats.com
 
Old 12-31-2003, 12:15 PM   #5 (permalink)
Lpdiver
 
Posts: 1048
Default Re: Marriage in US or France?

1.A valid passport or a carte de sejour.



2.A birth certificate extrait d'acte de naissance less than 3 months old
supplied by a bureau of records, not a hospital.



3.A certificate of "celibacy" (attestation tenant lieu de declaration
en vue de mariage ou de non-remariage) less than 3 months old.



4.A medical certificate (certificat médical prénuptial) less than 3
months old, stating that the individual was examined by a doctor en
vue de mariage. This can be provided by any qualified doctor
practicing in France.



5.The tests are: serological tests for syphilis, serological tests to
determine blood types and, for women, serological tests for rubella
and toxoplasma.



6.Proof of domicile (justificatifs de domicile). The resident party
must supply 2 documents proving residence in the commune, for example
an EDF bill, telephone account, rent receipt or residential insurance
documents.



7.If pre-nuptial agreements are to be made, this must be done with a
lawyer (notaire) who will provide a certificat du notaire which must
be submitted to the mairie. It must have been drawn up no more than 2
months prior to the marriage.



.8.If there are no pre-nuptial contracts, then the parties will be
married under the communauté réduite aux acquets. This means that what
each party owns personally before the marriage, or whatever comes to
them afterwards through inheritance, remains their property. Only that
which is acquired during the marriage is owned equally by both parties.



9.In the case of previous marriages the parties must provide a
certified copy of the death certificate of the deceased spouse or a
certified copy of the final divorce decree.



10.A child born prior to the marriage may be legitimised. The town hall
must be notified and a copy of the birth certificate provided (in
particular indicating the fact of recognition).



11.Foreign Nationals may be required to provide an Affidavit of Law
(certificat de coutume) and an Affidavit of Marital Status. These
statements concern marriage laws in the foreigners home country and
are required to certify that the party may, under law of their
country, be married. The relevant Embassy will have documents,
available at a fee.



The Civil Ceremony:











Originally posted by Luke & Christiane

    > Hello All -


    > I'm American and my fiancée is French. She is here on a 6 month

    > tourist visa. We will have a church wedding in France in June, and are

    > trying to figure out whether to get married legally in the US before

    > she returns to France in March or to have the legal ceremony in France

    > just before the church wedding. If all goes as planned, I will be able

    > to spend the next year in France. We eventually intend to live in the

    > US.


    > I called the French consulate in New York, and a woman there

    > recommended that we marry in the US because to marry in France would

    > require that I have a carte de sejour or some such thing. But I would

    > sooner trust someone with actual experience. We've seen posts in this

    > group to the contrary: that because of Direct Consular Filing (a

    > concept I haven't yet mastered) we would be better off marrying in

    > France.


    > If anyone could offer any advice we would be grateful.


    > Many thanks,


Luke and Christiane

__________________
Posted via http://britishexpats.com
 
Old 12-31-2003, 12:22 PM   #6 (permalink)
Joshscarole
 
Posts: 213
Default Re: Marriage in US or France?

Originally posted by Luke & Christiane

    > Hello All -


    > I'm American and my fiancée is French. She is here on a 6 month

    > tourist visa. We will have a church wedding in France in June, and are

    > trying to figure out whether to get married legally in the US before

    > she returns to France in March or to have the legal ceremony in France

    > just before the church wedding. If all goes as planned, I will be able

    > to spend the next year in France. We eventually intend to live in the

    > US.


    > I called the French consulate in New York, and a woman there

    > recommended that we marry in the US because to marry in France would

    > require that I have a carte de sejour or some such thing. But I would

    > sooner trust someone with actual experience. We've seen posts in this

    > group to the contrary: that because of Direct Consular Filing (a

    > concept I haven't yet mastered) we would be better off marrying in

    > France.


    > If anyone could offer any advice we would be grateful.


    > Many thanks,


    > Luke and Christiane



Hi Luke and Christiane,



My husband is American, I am French, and we got married in France. Josh
did NOT need a carte de sejour. However, if you want to stay after the
wedding, you will need one. But you can get a VPF (Vie Privee et
Familiale) carte de sejour only after the wedding. There is no need to
go through trouble to get another sort of carte de sejour (for example
salarie) before the wedding. You can just stay after the wedding and
apply for the card and they won't give you trouble. That would make you
a resident of France and would allow you to go the DCF route (although
it is now said that the Consulate in Paris does DCF even for non-french
resident USCs).



I don't think marrying in France or the US would matter at all in all
this. If you've already been to France, you've probably noticed that
going through French immigration at the airport is a piece of cake as
they don't ask you any question as to the purpose of your trip (unlike
the American immigration!). At either rate, I don't think being married
to a French person would be a reason for keeping you out of the country.
You could therefore ask for a carte de sejour the same way.



If you do decide to get married in France, here is the link from the
consulate in Paris that tells you which papers you need: ]http://www.amb-
usa.fr/consul/guideoas/marri.pdf[/url]



Best of luck!



Carole

__________________
Posted via http://britishexpats.com
 
Old 12-31-2003, 07:04 PM   #7 (permalink)
Luke & Christiane
 
Posts: 6
Default Re: Marriage in US or France?

Dear Carole,

MANY thanks for your help; this is the first bit of concrete advice
we've had! The question of US or France seems to depend less the
French side (as you've said, it's pretty straightforward) but on what
would happen when we eventually come back to the US. Would Christiane
have had a great advantage in obtaining a green card etc having been
married in the US? Or does it even matter? I'm sure we'd both rather
have all the ceremonies done in France, but if it would simplify all
the paperwork for the return to the US we'd just have a legal wedding
in new york before she returns to France. I'm not even sure that would
be a good idea; I've read that there are problems if you bring someone
to the US on a tourist visa with the intention to marry them...

thanks again,
Luke and Christiane
 
Old 01-01-2004, 12:18 AM   #8 (permalink)
Joshscarole
 
Posts: 213
Default Re: Marriage in US or France?

Originally posted by Luke & Christiane

    > Dear Carole,


    > MANY thanks for your help; this is the first bit of concrete advice

    > we've had! The question of US or France seems to depend less the

    > French side (as you've said, it's pretty straightforward) but on what

    > would happen when we eventually come back to the US. Would Christiane

    > have had a great advantage in obtaining a green card etc having been

    > married in the US? Or does it even matter? I'm sure we'd both rather

    > have all the ceremonies done in France, but if it would simplify all

    > the paperwork for the return to the US we'd just have a legal wedding

    > in new york before she returns to France. I'm not even sure that would

    > be a good idea; I've read that there are problems if you bring someone

    > to the US on a tourist visa with the intention to marry them...


    > thanks again,

    > Luke and Christiane



Luke and Christiane,



Glad I could be helpful! =)



If you ever wanted to go back to the US, you would apply at the
consulate in Paris for DCF since you would still be living together in
France. A french or an american wedding has the same value
internationally, so it wouldn't matter to them where you got married. I
truly believe it would make NO difference.



Another thing you might want to consider is the cost of the papers for
the wedding itself. When we got married in France, Josh needed a
certificat de coutume, which cost him a hefty $200 (we got it in the
US from a lawyer accredited by the French embassy there--you can get
the list of those on their website), and a certificat de celibat which
we had to go get at the consulate in Paris itself, and that was $35.
Then add to that the medical examination and blood tests which are
required (Christiane's will be covered by the securite sociale, but
not yours. I don't remember how much we paid for those). It's sort of
a pain to gather all the papers, but it's not too tough. I don't know
what you need to get married in the US, but I've heard that it was
cheaper and easier.



About getting married in the US, yes it is technically illegal to come
on a tourist visa/waiver to marry. This is referred to as a "ten-foot
pole" topic on this forum, you can do a search on it.



Quoi que vous fassiez, je vous souhaite le plus grand bonheur! =)



Carole

__________________
Posted via http://britishexpats.com
 
Old 01-01-2004, 05:23 AM   #9 (permalink)
Sophie T
 
Posts: 163
Default Re: Marriage in US or France?

Hello,

Just a little note about marrying in the US from our experience. My husband
and I married while he was here visiting, but he had no intention of
remaining in the US at that time. The requirements for marriage vary by
state. Mine (Tennessee) only required identification from both of us
(passport was fine). I later flew to Switzerland and we filed via DCF. We
had no problems with it at all. It's my understanding that one can marry in
the US as long as that person intends to leave after. Since Christiane is
already here in the US, it seems it may be easier to be officially married
here, and then have the other ceremony in France.

Best wishes to you both,

Sophie

"JoshsCarole" <member15600@british_expats.com> wrote in message
news:...
    > Originally posted by Luke & Christiane
    > > Dear Carole,
    > >
    > > MANY thanks for your help; this is the first bit of concrete advice
    > > we've had! The question of US or France seems to depend less the
    > > French side (as you've said, it's pretty straightforward) but on what
    > > would happen when we eventually come back to the US. Would Christiane
    > > have had a great advantage in obtaining a green card etc having been
    > > married in the US? Or does it even matter? I'm sure we'd both rather
    > > have all the ceremonies done in France, but if it would simplify all
    > > the paperwork for the return to the US we'd just have a legal wedding
    > > in new york before she returns to France. I'm not even sure that would
    > > be a good idea; I've read that there are problems if you bring someone
    > > to the US on a tourist visa with the intention to marry them...
    > >
    > > thanks again,
    > > Luke and Christiane
    > Luke and Christiane,
    > Glad I could be helpful! =)
    > If you ever wanted to go back to the US, you would apply at the
    > consulate in Paris for DCF since you would still be living together in
    > France. A french or an american wedding has the same value
    > internationally, so it wouldn't matter to them where you got married. I
    > truly believe it would make NO difference.
    > Another thing you might want to consider is the cost of the papers for
    > the wedding itself. When we got married in France, Josh needed a
    > certificat de coutume, which cost him a hefty $200 (we got it in the
    > US from a lawyer accredited by the French embassy there--you can get
    > the list of those on their website), and a certificat de celibat which
    > we had to go get at the consulate in Paris itself, and that was $35.
    > Then add to that the medical examination and blood tests which are
    > required (Christiane's will be covered by the securite sociale, but
    > not yours. I don't remember how much we paid for those). It's sort of
    > a pain to gather all the papers, but it's not too tough. I don't know
    > what you need to get married in the US, but I've heard that it was
    > cheaper and easier.
    > About getting married in the US, yes it is technically illegal to come
    > on a tourist visa/waiver to marry. This is referred to as a "ten-foot
    > pole" topic on this forum, you can do a search on it.
    > Quoi que vous fassiez, je vous souhaite le plus grand bonheur! =)
    > Carole
    > --
    > Posted via http://britishexpats.com
 
Old 01-01-2004, 11:18 AM   #10 (permalink)
Andy Platt
 
Posts: 439
Default Re: Marriage in US or France?

"JoshsCarole" <member15600@british_expats.com> wrote:

    > About getting married in the US, yes it is technically illegal to come
    > on a tourist visa/waiver to marry. This is referred to as a "ten-foot
    > pole" topic on this forum, you can do a search on it.

The illegality is purely involved with the intention to remain. It is 100%
legal to come to the US on a visa or use the visa waiver if available to get
married, with the intention to return back home again. The US consulate
website for London specifically states this.

For this poster it seems the intention is to live in France for a year or so
after getting married so getting married in the US and then leaving for
France would be a perfectly acceptable option. It's their call.

Andy.
__________________
I'm not really here, it's just your warped imagination
 
 


Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is Off
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are Off
Pingbacks are Off
Refbacks are Off

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
marriage and dual citizenship. Shak US Marriage based Visas 9 01-08-2004 07:17 PM
CR-1 and marriage in Brazil Mark T US Marriage based Visas 0 01-08-2004 03:59 PM
proxy marriage\ consummation question? C&G US Marriage based Visas 6 01-08-2004 12:10 AM
Re: marriage fraud Dave Dubya US Marriage based Visas 110 12-22-2003 07:01 PM
IR1 issued 20 years ago...new marriage and rentry to US Sidangelika US Marriage based Visas 4 12-08-2003 12:13 AM




Copyright © 2004, 2007 expatforums.com


Powered by: vBulletin, ©2000 - 2012, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd. - LinkBacks Enabled by vBSEO