Download Article
Download Article
We've all seen the movies where a person halts a wedding in progress in order to get back the one they truly love. In reality, stopping a wedding is a much more serious undertaking. It involves a lot of thought and planning and taking an honest look at your motives and intentions. If you truly believe the couple shouldn't be together and if you believe you're justified in doing so, we have some suggestions for going about stopping a wedding with logic and legal action.
Steps
-
Consider your motivations. Before attempting to stop a wedding you need to think about why you have decided to take this on. Ask yourself if you believe you have the best intentions for both individuals by stopping their wedding. Try to understand why the couple has decided to get married and if you may be the only person feeling otherwise.
- Talk with family members or other people involved in the wedding to find out if someone else feels similarly.
- If you want to stop a wedding it's best to find legal reasons why it shouldn't happen.
- Do not base halting a wedding purely on emotions like jealousy or hatred. Those can be worked through with communication and therapy.
-
Meet with the bride and groom privately to talk. Go directly to the couple-to-be and calmly discuss why you believe their wedding should be stopped. If there are legal reasons they should not be married bring these up and show the facts.
- Imagine how you would feel if someone tried to stop you from having your wedding. Go into your discussion with the couple thinking carefully about the words you use and your reasoning.
- Make sure to stay calm and collected to get your point across in the best way.
- Voice your concerns and why you feel so strongly opposed to the wedding, but also listen to them and hear their side.
- Offer solutions if you bring up legal problems and it's more likely the couple will listen and cooperate.
Advertisement -
Address your concerns one-on-one. If you need to, ask to speak individually with the couple-to-be. This is beneficial if you don't think you can keep a cool head talking with them both at the same time. Discuss your concerns with them separately.
- This may be a good time to ask questions about how they are feeling about the wedding, and what their future looks like in their eyes; why they believe their significant other is the one for them etc. That kind of discussion could bring up uncertainty they may have about getting married and you can use it to enable them to think a little more, and possibly call off the wedding.
-
Convince the couple to wait a year. If you can't convince one or both of the lovebirds to call off the wedding, you can try getting them to hold off for a year.
- The expense of a wedding is a great excuse to need to wait to save up more money.
- Planning a wedding is a lot of time and effort. For some, schooling, athletics, or current hobbies may take up much of their time and you can use this as another excuse to wait.
- Another excuse to hold off until another year would be family events coming up such as grandpa's 80th or the birth of a new baby. You could use these by saying how much nicer it may be to have a wedding when the celebration will be all about them.
- If none of these are true, and you feel the couple actually isn't a good match, you can also tell them the truth if you think they will listen; you believe they should wait a year to see what comes of their relationship, and if they're still together and happy its testament of their bond and they can decide to get married then.
-
Suggest a “fake” wedding. Discuss holding a wedding celebration, but without the minister and paperwork. No one else has to know it's not legally binding and everyone can still enjoy themselves. This may satisfy a couple looking forward to the event and festivity but avoid any trouble later with divorce lawyers if it doesn't end well.
Advertisement
-
Call out the lies. If you know the wedding is a fraud, or there are legal reasons the wedding should not go through as planned, you have at least 28 days to take legal action. Couples must let a registrar know of their decision to get married and the registrar is required to make that information public for at least 28 days.
- Laws vary by jurisdiction, and each case is situation. Call or visit your local courthouse to discuss the steps you need to take once you have legal reasons the couple cannot get married.
-
Involve others. If you have a good reason to believe the wedding should be stopped it will help if you get others to feel the same way. If you feel it may be your only way to stop the wedding, share your research you've done with the family and friends of the couple to obtain a greater opposition. Use this pressure to divide the couple.
- This should be done as a last resort as it could be very traumatic, or it could actually bring the couple closer together in their possible attempt to escape and elope.
- Crashing a wedding is not advised. It is a dramatic and reputation-damaging route which may not even work since some couples are legally married by signing the marriage license before the wedding ceremony.
- The recommended plan would be to talk way ahead of time with the couple to avoid expenses and chaos and to have a rational discussion where you all share your sides.
-
Follow the money. If the couple are relying on both or one set of their parents to support the wedding, you may want to try to stop the money source so the wedding will be called off. If you have legal reasons, again, share this with the parents and let them know they may be financially supporting a harmful situation. If there aren't legal reasons you can still voice other concerns and attempt to stop the money flow.
Advertisement
-
Void the marriage after the wedding. You can use an annulment to legally cancel-out the marriage as if it never happened. [1] X Research source After the wedding one of the two newly weds can call for an annulment for several different reasons.
- The marriage was with a minor and required approval from the court and/or parental consent.
- The marriage was not consummated and neither spouse were able to have sexual relations.
- Either spouse were mentally ill or mentally incapacitated; involved with drugs or drunk.
- If the marriage was illegal based on incest
- If the marriage was fraudulent; one spouse marrying the other based on lies.
- If a spouse was forced or blackmailed into the marriage.
- If either of the two were still married to someone else at the time of the wedding. [2] X Research source
- If you know the wedding is going to happen on any of those pretenses then you may still be able to null out the marriage after the wedding. Talk with the person whom you believe should initiate the annulment and show them how they can escape the marriage.
-
Wait for the marriage to fail down the road. If the couple are fairly young and it's their first marriage there's a 40% chance the marriage will end in divorce.
- Waiting is not a fantastic solution since there may not actually be an end in sight. This should be your very last resort.
- This could be a good plan if you believe the relationship is already particularly unstable.
-
Move on. If you feel you've done all you can rationally do to stop the wedding without success, it's time to accept the inevitable. It may take time, but since you have no control over the couples' decisions, the best way to get over your opposition is to move forward with your life.
Advertisement
Community Q&A
Search
-
QuestionMy parents want me to marry a person that I do not love instead of the person that I want to marry. What can I do?Community AnswerTell your parents how you feel and if they don't budge get legal help and go to court.
-
QuestionWho is the one who wants the marriage to be called off?Community AnswerUsually it's yourself but if a family member or friend is pushing you to stop someone else's wedding, be strong, stand up for yourself and say no to them.
-
QuestionI like someone, but she broke up with me and is marrying another man. I only want her, and no other girls, how can I stop her?Community AnswerDid she tell you why she broke up with you? If so, did you listen to what she said? Sometimes two people are just not compatible with each other. Also, you say you "like" her, but presumably she is with someone who loves her now, since they are getting married. If you're really serious about this, tell her how you feel and how you've changed since the two of you broke up, but I wouldn't get your hopes up.
Ask a Question
200 characters left
Include your email address to get a message when this question is answered.
Submit
Advertisement
Video
Tips
- It will be more effective if you are not seen as the crazy person coming to ruin wedding plans. This means have your plan well thought out and your facts straight when you talk with the bride and groom to-be – along with evidence if you need it.Thanks
- If you dream of running into the wedding shouting “I object!” after the minister asks if anyone disagrees with the marriage, think again. Unlike the movies, most ministers nowadays do not use that line and instead call for noise in support of the marriage.Thanks
- Be careful how you say/do things. Say they should cancel the wedding in a nice, calm way. Don't start shouting/yelling at them and don't get a bunch of people and just gang up on them.Thanks
Tips from our Readers
The advice in this section is based on the lived experiences of wikiHow readers like you. If you have a helpful tip you’d like to share on wikiHow, please submit it in the field below.
- If you are halting a wedding because you are in love with the bride or groom, consider how they might feel. If they object, they'll be angry at you. If they do decide to go with you, the other person may be very upset. After all, this was their big day, and not only have you ruined it, you've taken away the person they thought loved them. If you have a previous relationship with the bride or groom that ended badly, it might end badly again.
- Unless one of them is a danger to the other, leave them alone. Unless there is fraud or criminal intent, there is no reason to stop a wedding. Voice your opinion, but leave them alone. Especially if they are adults.
Submit a Tip
All tip submissions are carefully reviewed before being published
Name
Please provide your name and last initial
Thanks for submitting a tip for review!
Advertisement
Warnings
- Even if they haven't signed the marriage license, the couple is still legally married by state laws after saying the oath in front of the minister.Thanks
- Be aware that often couples will legally be married before the wedding. They may sit down with the minister and sign the marriage license to get it over with before the celebration.Thanks
- Be aware that this may be awkward later if their wedding continues and they have a happy life. Things between you may not be the same as they were before.Thanks
Advertisement
References
About This Article
Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 586,369 times.
Advertisement