Only if he has authority to act as her agent by virtue of a valid power of attorney.
All parties on title to the home must sign the loan documents; so, your husband can not do a loan on his own. Some states allow the spouse to sign the note (the debt) but not the deed; that would mean you are on the loan only but not the title; in that case, your husband would be able to encumber the property with another loan in his loan only.
The right to tell her to make him a Semich
no if you did not sign anything
No- that would constitute forgery. A wife cannot sign her husband's name to any legal document unless she was granted a Power of Attorney and states on the document that she is signing his name as his attorney-in-fact.
No, if the wife is not an authorized user on the credit card then it does not affect the wife's credit report. So the late payment will only be on the husband credit report.
Not if the wife's name is on the title. She is the only one who can sell the car.
His first wifes name was Rose, maiden name unknown, and his second wifes name was Barbara, her maiden name also unknown. Rose died during the first winter and Barbara survived her husband and had seven kids
car is in wifes and my name, she got a title loan unknowingly from the husband. She defaulted, can they take the car from the husband?
Both of you, together and individually!
Ask yourself the question that if the husband purchased a lottery ticket and the ticket was a winner, would the payments be partly the wife's?
No unless his name is on any debt or contract.
Is a Husband supposed to buy a gift for his wifes baby shower?
She'll need to sign it over to you.
All parties on title to the home must sign the loan documents; so, your husband can not do a loan on his own. Some states allow the spouse to sign the note (the debt) but not the deed; that would mean you are on the loan only but not the title; in that case, your husband would be able to encumber the property with another loan in his loan only.
no
You and the "someone else" create and sign a new deed for the home that includes the wife's name, and then you record it with the registry (or assessor, or local equivalent).
She would now owe on the car. She inherits everything.