Advanced Nullity Assessment Form
Formula Used
The calculator uses a weighted statistical model. Each selected nullity factor adds a preset value. Evidence strength adds a percentage-based support value. Delay, long marriage duration, counter evidence, and strict jurisdiction settings reduce the final score.
Core formula:
Final Score = Ground Score + Evidence Score - Delay Penalty - Duration Penalty - Counter Evidence Penalty - Strictness Penalty
The final score is limited between 0 and 100. Higher scores mean stronger statistical support for review.
How to Use This Calculator
Enter the number of months since marriage and discovery of the issue. Add the evidence strength percentage. Select every factor that may apply. Adjust counter evidence and jurisdiction strictness. Press the calculate button. The result appears above the form and below the header. Use CSV or PDF buttons for records.
Example Data Table
| Case Type | Main Ground | Evidence | Delay | Counter Risk | Estimated Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prior marriage | Existing spouse | 90% | 2 months | 10% | High support |
| Consent issue | Coercion | 75% | 8 months | 25% | Moderate support |
| Fraud claim | Material fraud | 55% | 18 months | 45% | Low support |
| Procedure defect | License issue | 40% | 24 months | 60% | Very low support |
Nullity of Marriage Statistical Review
What This Calculator Measures
A nullity of marriage calculator helps organize facts. It does not decide a case. Courts, religious bodies, and local authorities may use different rules. This tool gives a structured score. It reviews common factors. It also applies timing and evidence adjustments. The result helps users prepare a clearer discussion.
Why Weighted Factors Matter
Some grounds are usually stronger than others. A prior existing marriage may carry heavy importance. A prohibited relationship may also be serious. Consent problems, coercion, fraud, and capacity concerns can matter too. Procedure defects may be important in some places. The calculator uses weights to reflect that difference. The model is statistical, not legal.
Evidence Changes the Result
A claim is stronger when evidence is organized. Documents, messages, dates, witnesses, and official records may support the facts. Weak evidence can reduce practical value. Strong evidence can improve the score. Counter evidence can also reduce the score. That is why the calculator includes both sides.
Timing and Limitation Risk
Timing can affect many legal discussions. A long delay after discovery may create questions. A long marriage may also affect review. Some systems treat void and voidable marriages differently. The calculator adds delay penalties to highlight timing concerns. Users should check local rules before relying on any result.
Best Use of the Result
Use the final score as a planning guide. Save the PDF or CSV report. Compare several scenarios. Review missing documents. Then speak with a qualified professional in the correct jurisdiction. The calculator is useful for preparation. It is not a substitute for formal legal advice.
FAQs
1. What does this calculator estimate?
It estimates statistical support for a nullity review using selected factors, evidence strength, timing, and counter evidence. It does not make a legal decision.
2. Is the result legal advice?
No. The result is only a planning score. Legal advice must come from a qualified professional who understands the local law and facts.
3. Why does evidence strength matter?
Evidence strength shows how well the claim can be supported. Strong records, dates, and witnesses can improve the statistical score.
4. Why is there a delay penalty?
Delay can create practical problems. Some claims may become harder to explain when a person waits long after discovering the issue.
5. What is counter evidence risk?
Counter evidence risk reflects facts that may weaken the claim. Examples include inconsistent statements, missing records, or evidence supporting validity.
6. Can I download the result?
Yes. Use the CSV button for spreadsheet records. Use the PDF button for a simple printable summary.
7. Why is jurisdiction strictness included?
Rules vary by place. A stricter setting lowers the score to reflect tougher review standards and narrower acceptable grounds.
8. What score is considered strong?
A score of 75% or higher is marked high statistical support. It still needs professional review before any action.