Answer The answer to your question could be quite complicated as you stayed in a relationship with a woman who had children with another man during your marriage. The best advice I can offer you is to go and see a Lawyer and find out your rights. Good luck
Those aspects of a divorce are settled on a case by case basis according to many factors such as state laws, the needs of the parties, income, length of marriage, ability of the parties to acquire employment and assets in the future, whether there are children, etc.
Property acquired during the marriage is generally considered marital property and the court will decide how it will be divided.
Those aspects of a divorce are settled on a case by case basis according to many factors such as state laws, the needs of the parties, income, length of marriage, ability of the parties to acquire employment and assets in the future, whether there are children, etc.
Property acquired during the marriage is generally considered marital property and the court will decide how it will be divided.
Those aspects of a divorce are settled on a case by case basis according to many factors such as state laws, the needs of the parties, income, length of marriage, ability of the parties to acquire employment and assets in the future, whether there are children, etc.
Property acquired during the marriage is generally considered marital property and the court will decide how it will be divided.
Those aspects of a divorce are settled on a case by case basis according to many factors such as state laws, the needs of the parties, income, length of marriage, ability of the parties to acquire employment and assets in the future, whether there are children, etc.
Property acquired during the marriage is generally considered marital property and the court will decide how it will be divided.
Those aspects of a divorce are settled on a case by case basis according to many factors such as state laws, the needs of the parties, income, length of marriage, ability of the parties to acquire employment and assets in the future, whether there are children, etc.
Property acquired during the marriage is generally considered marital property and the court will decide how it will be divided.
If the couple cannot come to an agreement for the equitable division of their marital property the judge in the divorce proceeding will divide the property. The marriage will be ended. The wife should not be penalized for her infidelity.
An inheritance by either a wife or her husband is not the property of the other. An inheritance is the sole property of the beneficiary who inherited it.An inheritance by either a wife or her husband is not the property of the other. An inheritance is the sole property of the beneficiary who inherited it.An inheritance by either a wife or her husband is not the property of the other. An inheritance is the sole property of the beneficiary who inherited it.An inheritance by either a wife or her husband is not the property of the other. An inheritance is the sole property of the beneficiary who inherited it.
No. Divorce severs the legal relationship between the parties. Once a couple has been divorced there are no community property rights between them. Their community property should have been divided as part of the divorce and once the divorce was final each has no claim to the estate of the other.
It depends on where you are. In must U.S. states, there is no registration. Guns generally fall under the same laws as other property in a divorce, so it depends on what the local laws are about dividing property.
Only the spouse who will not be getting the property needs to be a grantor on the deed. In essence, one of the spouses is surrendering their share of the property over to the other.
You can't stop someone from delaying a divorce. A judge or magistrate eventually will and can move a divorce ahead without the other party.
After a divorce, the court will determine how the assets should be distributed. One partner cannot remove the name of the other from property without the court's ratification.
In the UK, marriage does not mean property ownership transfers to both parties. Therefore both the husband and the wife may own their own property independently of each other. If the husband paid for and owns the car, the wife cannot lawfully take it without permission. That being said, in the event of a divorce, both the husband and wife's assets may be evenly shared between the two.
If your husband died and co-owned property with other people, what was specified in the will. If there's not a will, it will go through probate court.
No. A judgment of divorce is final and releases both parties from claims of the other.
You could, but in the midst of divorce it is best to avoid doing anything out of the ordinary. The furniture sounds like a minor thing, so clean up the pool and move on. Leave each other's property alone.
A wife's (spouse's) money is only protected from the husband's (other spouse's) creditors if any of the following are true: * The couple lives in a non-community property state and the loan/credit account is only in the husband's name * The couple lives in a community property state, the loan/credit account is only in the husband's name, the loan existed before the marriage and has provably not been used in any way to benefit the wife
Yes. Florida is a marrige state once you are married not matter if married before or after you are both now owners of that home. * If the house was in your name ONLY before you got married, he has no claim to it. * If the spouse was not added to the title then he does not have ownership rights to the property itself. He will however, be entitled to recover at least a portion if not half of the money he paid into the purchase of the property or a "trade off" in other assets to allow the equitable distribution of marital property.