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5F, 526 Nonhyeon-ro,
Gangnam-gu, Seoul, Korea
Address
5F, 526 Nonhyeon-ro,
Gangnam-gu, Seoul, Korea
Jurisdiction
Private International Act(“PIA”) is a statute that determines the principles and governing law of legal relations with foreign aspects (Article 1 of the PIA). When a divorce claim is filed, the Korean court will decide which law shall govern the filed divorce claim according to Article 39 which refers to Article 37 of the PIA. The governing law shall be one of either (i) the law of the country both spouses are from, (ii) if the couple have different nationalities, the law of the country in which both spouses have common habitual residence, (iii) if they don’t have a common habitual residence either, the law of the country which is most closely connected with both spouses. International marriages will obviously fall under category (ii) or (iii). However there is an exception: in case one of the spouses is Korean, and has habitual residence in Korea, the divorce shall be governed by Korean law.
Korean law shall be applied:
Therefore, residence in Korea is not required to get a divorce from the Korean Court. Jurisdiction is not the biggest issue most of the time, but jurisdiction for settling property division, alimony, parental and custodial rights, child support, and visitation rights may vary. For example, in case of property division lex situs(the law of the country where the property is located) may apply, whereas in case of child custody the country where the child resides could be of importance.
For consultations on this issue do not hesitate to contact Cha & Kwon Law Offices.