Yes, but it would involve them either voluntarily, or under court order, to do it.
You can name anyone as beneficiary.
No.
An ex-wife remains as a "Named Beneficiary" until such time as her ex-husband authorizes the Insurance Company to remove her name as such. If the ex-husband re-marries, his new wife does not stand to benefit from insurance proceeds until he makes the change with the issuing company. A common mistake is for divorced couples to not change their beneficiaries and when a death occurs, the new spouse finds out that the ex gets all the insurance benefits leaving the new spouse with nothing.
No. You cannot insure a vehicle that does not belong to you. If you were to add the vehicle without telling the insurance company that it doesn't belong to you there will be no coverage and any claim will be denied. You will have wasted your money.
To continue individual health insurance after a divorce, one can apply for an insurance coverage under the Federal Law COBRA. It means that person will be covered by his/her ex-spouse's insurance plan obtained from the ex-spouse's own company or employer.
No, if she was the named beneficiary the benefits belongs to her, and she has no legal responsibility for the deceased's children.
If you own the property you are an insured. The agent can't legally remove you from the policy. If he does he is subject to review by your states Insurance Licensing Bureau.
The person named beneficiary is the sole recipient, the ex-spouse would not have a supportable claim to any portion of the death benefit.
That would not be a very nice thing to do, what you should do is write to your spouse and the insurance company, point out that you are now separated and indicating that you will no longer be paying for your spouses insurance after a fixed date in the future. This informs the insurance company of your intentions and allows your ex spouse to arrange their own health insurance.
The Florida Probate Code In Florida, divorce does not remove the ex-spouse as beneficiary under a life insurance policy. Florida takes the position that the life insurance policy is a contract and should not be interfered with unless fraud is involved. Check your insurance policy to be sure who you have named as beneficiary. Do not rely on the numerous statutory probate codes to determine who will get the insurance proceeds. If you want to change the beneificary of your life insurance policy and the divorce decree is final, complete a new beneficiary form, keep a copy and send it to the insurance company.
They would have trouble listing an ex spouse as the policyholder as that usually requires them to sign unless they listed both themselves and the former spouse as co-policyholders. If this is the case the ex-spouse can sign to cancel the policy as well. If both are listed as policyholders then either one can make changes to the policy. I won't say they can't do this because anyone can lie to the agent if they say they are still married and they have all the ex-spouses information. But how would that benefit them. It probably wouldn't make any difference or hardly any difference in the premium.