No. That would be a crime and you should report it to the local district attorney.
If both of you signed the deed to the house you are entitled to half. However if your spouse owned the house before you were married it belongs to him.
You are the "spouse" until you are no longer legally married.
Not if you are still married.
No, as long as he & his x-spouse are divorced. Then it is fine.
If the separated spouse is still legally married to the debtor spouse and/or co-signed the original obligation while married, yes.
No. Married is still married.
Any married person has the option of filing as "Married filing separately" which requires no reporting or signature of the spouse. You can also still file as "Married filing jointly" if you both wish to do so as long as you can get the spouse's signature.
If the debt was made when they were still married the answer is yes. STATED BY AUTHOR
Bigamy
You are two people who are married to each other who are separated.
They become one in Gods eyes. So if you get divorced, its only by law, but you are still one with your spouse in Gods eyes. So if you get remarried and your spouse is still alive, you sin.
Your spouse can not legally remarry if he/she is already married. The "remarriage" is invalid and of no effect. A person who knowingly marries while still legally married commits bigamy in the United States.