Anyway after the divorce is made clear, then you will get a regular amount of money, to study.
Maybe. It depends on whether she was properly served, whether she was given proper notice of the hearing, if she notified the court of her absence, and on what kind of ruling on a final decree the husband is asking for.
If you have a separation agreement that was made part of the divorce decree and that provides that she must pay a share of the medical expenses, you can file a motion for contempt if she refuses to obey the order. The court can compel payment.
Lawsuit time ... that is, if this order was part of the final divorce decree. Also depends on "who" "ordered" this to be done and when.
No. That issue would be controlled under Rhode Island law:"After 6/4/76, a divorce decree does not become final by operation of statute but only upon entry of final decree upon the expiration of at least 3 months after the trial and decision. A remarriage in Rhode Island or any other jurisdiction during that 3 months is void in all States because the parties to the divorce are still husband and wife. There is no period following the final decree during which the parties are prohibited from remarrying."See related link.No. That issue would be controlled under Rhode Island law:"After 6/4/76, a divorce decree does not become final by operation of statute but only upon entry of final decree upon the expiration of at least 3 months after the trial and decision. A remarriage in Rhode Island or any other jurisdiction during that 3 months is void in all States because the parties to the divorce are still husband and wife. There is no period following the final decree during which the parties are prohibited from remarrying."See related link.No. That issue would be controlled under Rhode Island law:"After 6/4/76, a divorce decree does not become final by operation of statute but only upon entry of final decree upon the expiration of at least 3 months after the trial and decision. A remarriage in Rhode Island or any other jurisdiction during that 3 months is void in all States because the parties to the divorce are still husband and wife. There is no period following the final decree during which the parties are prohibited from remarrying."See related link.No. That issue would be controlled under Rhode Island law:"After 6/4/76, a divorce decree does not become final by operation of statute but only upon entry of final decree upon the expiration of at least 3 months after the trial and decision. A remarriage in Rhode Island or any other jurisdiction during that 3 months is void in all States because the parties to the divorce are still husband and wife. There is no period following the final decree during which the parties are prohibited from remarrying."See related link.
Answer No.
Please kindly note the decree said that the husband would buy the wife a house of her own , and no trustee part appeared in the decree , so the husband is wrong.
Never. No matter how long ago your wife left you you're not divorced until you file for divorce and obtain a divorce decree in the family court.Never. No matter how long ago your wife left you you're not divorced until you file for divorce and obtain a divorce decree in the family court.Never. No matter how long ago your wife left you you're not divorced until you file for divorce and obtain a divorce decree in the family court.Never. No matter how long ago your wife left you you're not divorced until you file for divorce and obtain a divorce decree in the family court.
Child visitation should have been taken care of in the divorce decree. If the ex wife is violating a divorce decree inform her that she is in violation of a judge's legal order. She can get jail time for that.
Generally such issues are decided before the final decree is granted and usually it is not possible to have the decree amended. If there are no terms for such issues included in the divorce decree the matter usually needs to be determined in a lawsuit against the non requesting party if an equitable agreement cannot be reached otherwise.
It takes from 8 to 10 weeks for an uncontested divorce to become final after it is filed. You should be hearing something or receiving a copy of the final decree soon.
You can draft your own separation agreement, but I would not recommend trying to create any of the actual divorce papers (bill of complaint/petition, answer, final decree)yourself.
No, hera was Zeus's first wife