A person can very well move out and stay anywhere she or he wants as long as they agree for the martial separation period.
In the state of Pennsylvania, property that is acquired after legal separation is not considered property purchased during the marriage. The only time that property is considered joint after legal separation is if joint marital funds are used.
Separation does not equal divorce. * Spouses may obtain and hold property separately from the marriage in any state that is not designated a community property state, in most cases such property is not subject to partitioning in the dissolution proceedings. The deciding factor would be how property and/or assets were obtained, independently or by the use of joint marital funds. In CP states the assets and/or property would only be protected if the couple were legally separated with the division of marital property having been settled.
Because back then church and state were one and the same.
No I am not in favor of separation of church and state
prob not
yes
Any answer must depend on the marital property laws in the state where you live/ claim residence, and any property agreements made in your separation documents. Your lawyer will give you a correct answer once you've presented all the legal facts involved.
There is no document. The phrase was coined by Thomas Jefferson during his presidency.
No
That depends on who has title to the premises, marital status, when the property was acquired and state laws. If you lived with a person who already owned their own home, then split up, you would not acquire any interest in their home.That depends on who has title to the premises, marital status, when the property was acquired and state laws. If you lived with a person who already owned their own home, then split up, you would not acquire any interest in their home.That depends on who has title to the premises, marital status, when the property was acquired and state laws. If you lived with a person who already owned their own home, then split up, you would not acquire any interest in their home.That depends on who has title to the premises, marital status, when the property was acquired and state laws. If you lived with a person who already owned their own home, then split up, you would not acquire any interest in their home.
West Virginia is a separate property state. A husband or wife can hold solely owned property. If the property was acquired during the marriage a judge may take the property into consideration during the distribution of marital assets pursuant to a divorce. It depends on the situation.West Virginia is a separate property state. A husband or wife can hold solely owned property. If the property was acquired during the marriage a judge may take the property into consideration during the distribution of marital assets pursuant to a divorce. It depends on the situation.West Virginia is a separate property state. A husband or wife can hold solely owned property. If the property was acquired during the marriage a judge may take the property into consideration during the distribution of marital assets pursuant to a divorce. It depends on the situation.West Virginia is a separate property state. A husband or wife can hold solely owned property. If the property was acquired during the marriage a judge may take the property into consideration during the distribution of marital assets pursuant to a divorce. It depends on the situation.
Roger Williams (Apex) --HS