Yes, especially if your spouse pays towards the insurance benefits out of his/her check.
spouse did not know name was on policy or that the other name was removed without knowledge
no
Not without permission of the court.
I would not drive a man's car if his wife said I couldn't no matter what. Legally, the person who is the policyholder on the insurance and the owner of the vehicle has to give you permission to drive. If you drive it on a regular basis, you must be listed as a driver on the insurance policy. If you drive the car without permission, and have an accident, you will not have coverage under the insurance policy.
If you give permission, your spouse can get medical records from before marriage. Without your written permission, your spouse can't legally obtain such records.
No
Without their permission, yes.
Yes.
If, your spouse uses your information without permission you should be able to receive a note about it. When you do receive the note speak with your wife nicely and then report to the location of your information holder and ask for it to be changed.
no that is incorrect.
no, you have to be there to show ID and sign paper work.
In most cases a card holding spouse can add the other as an "authorized user" without permission, however those types of cards are not liable for repayment of the balance, even on transactions preformed on their card. It is not legal for one spouse to add the other on any credit applications has a "co-signer" without that persons permission. However, the liability would not be in the hands of the credit card company, since if you are listed as a "co-signed" and claim you did not agree, sign-up or give you spouse permission, you risk your spouse being turned over to the States Attorneys office for consideration of Credit Card and Identify Fraud.