You can will anything you want to anyone you want.
Not necisarily. If you are married and the house was bought after the marriage then no. If you are married and the house was bought before the marriage and the person that did not originaly buy the house made one payment on it or you had a joint account that the payments came out of, then they are half owner. If you are just living together with no marriage, then the house it the person's that bought it, but you have to be carful of common law marriage.
Was this property bought before or after marriage? Either way, if you are married and want to sell real estate or a car or such, both spouses have to sign their consent to the transaction. So if your husband sold something behind your back, you might have a case. If it was bought before that, there's room for argument.
Yes Blake and Miranda are married they have been married for a while now. He bought her the ring that she wanted that was like 450,000 he said he will never say anything to mess with their marriage
Being the license does not complete the process. You must have the ceremony performed with an authorized officiant and file the license with signatures with the clerk.
In "The Owl and the Pussycat," the marriage is performed by a turkey.
depends on whether you are the husband or wife. in most states, the husband, if properly represented, will retain ownership of the house regardless of the length of the marriage. the woman will walk away with exactly what she entered into the marriage with... jack.
If you bought the house before the marriage it would still be considered your separate property, however, she could probably recover her contribution to the equity.
Only if the married couple reside in a community property state and the property was bought during the marriage.
He wrote, acted, got married, had three children, was in business, sued people and bought property. He also got a coat of arms for his father.
Proportion bought by men = 1/2.Proportion bought by women = 1/3.Proportion bought by men or women = 1/2 + 1/3 = 3/6 + 2/6 = 5/6.Therefore, proportion bought by children = 1- 5/6 = 1/6.
No
Your HUSBAND will have to pay the loan deficiency. HOWEVER - if the car was bought before marriage and your name is not on the title OR the loan papers, they cannot make YOU pay any part of it.