Whether or not you are entitled to half of your husband's house if you get divorced depends on a couple of things. If your name is on the deed along with his, then you are entitled to half the house. If your name is not on the deed but you live in a community property state, you get half the house. If your name is not on the deed and you do not live in a community property state, then you do not get half the house.
Not always - it depends on the judgement. For example, it would be unreasonable for a woman to be given half her ex-husbands assets - if they'd only been married a year ! She would obviously not have contributed anything to the already amassed assets and thus should not be entitled to half of everything he owns ! The same would apply if the roles were reversed.
Depends on where you live. Depends on your lawyer, too. Sometimes you get everything. Sometimes you get nothing. Ask for everything and you might get it.
That depends on the judge
A person cannot sue their spouse for breach of marriage contract. They can however sue them for divorce and end the contract of marriage.
The answer depends on the chronology and you haven't provided enough detail so consider the following:If you did not divorce after the first marriage then the second marriage was invalid.If the divorce was after the first marriage then your second marriage was valid and you are still married if you married the same person again.If both marriages to the same person were prior to the divorce then your marriage was legally dissolved.
Yes.
it gets nullified
If the marriage is not done by someone legal such as a minister; pastor or justice of the peace and the person who married the two of you does not have a license to do so then you are not legally married and so no divorce is necessary.
No. You can only be married to one person at a time. They would have to get a divorce first.
Until your divorce is finalized you are still legally married, and if you get married before the divorce is final you are guilty of the crime of bigamy. The second marriage is automaticaly nullified and invalid.
That depends on the law of the land in which the marriage took place.
tryed it all it does is get u put in jail
You need a divorce!
Usually a person files for divorce in their current resident state. If your Mexican marriage is recognized as legal by the U.S. then you will have to file in America if that is where you are living
No. You can only be married to one person at a time. If you married the same person twice only the first marriage was valid. The second would be a legal nullity. One divorce only dissolves only one marriage.No. You can only be married to one person at a time. If you married the same person twice only the first marriage was valid. The second would be a legal nullity. One divorce only dissolves only one marriage.No. You can only be married to one person at a time. If you married the same person twice only the first marriage was valid. The second would be a legal nullity. One divorce only dissolves only one marriage.No. You can only be married to one person at a time. If you married the same person twice only the first marriage was valid. The second would be a legal nullity. One divorce only dissolves only one marriage.