You have to file the papers in court, signed by both parties. There will be a court date after the alotted amount of time and the divorce will be granted.
Write the Clerk of Court of the court system which granted the divorce decree and request a copy of the document. There may be a fee involved for researching, copying, and mailing it to you internationally. If your divorce was handled by an attorney - ask them for a copy of it.
You can draft your own separation agreement, but I would not recommend trying to create any of the actual divorce papers (bill of complaint/petition, answer, final decree)yourself.
Go to the circuit court that handled the divorce.
I assume the judgment is against you. If you held the judgment, you will have received money and that may or may not be income. If you pay a judgment against you, whether or not you can "write it off" will depend entirely on what kind of judgment it is. Also, you may be able to write it off for state tax purposes but not federal and vice versa. Usually, paying most judgments does not affect taxes.
around 1929......
No, they are not a 'business' expense.
The song "Happy Tears"
by being funny
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Yes, it was about his divorce with then-wife Tameka Foster
It does not matter. They are the same thing.