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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.
it was the president who bought Florida for $5million and the whole Texas
you pay the tax of the state that you bought it in
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.
We bought California and Florida from them.
We bought it from Spain in exchange for Cuba.
No
IT was bought out by Citibank
Maison Blanche.
Florida was ceded to the US by Spain in 1819. It was not really bought, but the US government paid 5 million dollars to US citizens who had claims against Spain that were connected to the lack of government in Florida.
The United States bought Florida from Spain. The Adam-Onis Treaty was signed in 1819 and Florida was bought as a part of this treaty.
They found kidnapping and being bought for marriage a complement.