You may certainly file for divorce. Once you file, there is a 60 day waiting period before you may finalize the divorce. You may either hire an attorney to represent you in the case or you may try to do it yourself using forms that you find online or elsewhere. Grounds for divorce may be "insupportability" which means that you are not able to get along in a marriage.
There are very restrictive and limited grounds for annulment, but perhaps you meet them.
1. Under age 18.
2. Under the influence at marriage ceremony.
3. Impotency of spouse.
4. Fraud, duress or force.
5. Mental incapacity.
6. Concealed divorce.
7. Marriage less than 72 hours after license issued.
For each of these, once you discovered the problem you must no longer cohabit with the spouse.
Divorce divides any property accumulated during the marriage or confirms that each spouse's property in his or her possession is her separate property. Annulment only treats the marriage as never existing and no property is divided or confirmed.
Answered on May 11th, 2020 at 8:03 AM