Disclaimer: All facts gleaned from the filings stated hereafter are only as truthful as the petitioner. The tone of this article expresses a style of writing historically employed by America’s greatest writers and, as such, is for opinion purposes only. No intentional harm is due. Do not read if the topic of divorce (even your own) causes you emotional distress. Continue at your own risk.
The petition reads with the precision of a checklist, each assertion building on the last, leaving little room for interpretation. Hannah Wilson has asked the Circuit Court of St. Louis City, Missouri, to dissolve her marriage to Brandon Wilson, setting out the terms in a document that moves steadily from residency to conclusion.
The filing, entered in April 2026, establishes that both parties have lived in Missouri for the required period and are not members of the armed forces. It identifies the marriage as having taken place on May 13, 2017, in Tennessee, and notes that the couple remained together until March 22, 2026, when they physically separated. No additional proceedings involving the parties are referenced.
From there, the petition narrows its focus. It states that no children were born or adopted during the marriage and that the petitioner is not pregnant. Both parties are described as capable of supporting themselves, and the request is explicit: neither should be awarded maintenance. Each, the filing says, should be responsible for their own legal costs.
Property and debt are addressed in similarly direct terms. The petition distinguishes between non-marital property, which should remain with each individual, and marital assets and obligations, which should be divided in a fair and equitable manner. It also includes a request that the petitioner’s maiden name, Hannah Lanette Nichole Park, be restored.
What emerges is a document designed less to argue than to define boundaries—what is shared, what is separate, and what remains to be decided by the court. The filing initiates a process that will unfold through procedural steps, where the clarity of the initial claims will be measured against the court’s standards and, ultimately, resolved within them.
Please contact VowBreakers for access to documents related to the case.