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No!!
There is no requirement that you put a spouse on your rental agreement in Florida. If this were your primary home and you were purchasing it, then there would be requirement that both are on title or the one spouse sign document acknowledging they have the right to be.
If your spouse has granted you the power of attorney. Otherwise it would not be valid.
Not immediately. When you inherit something it is separate property because it was specifically designated to go to you. If you put these funds in a joint account or share them with your spouse then it would likely be deemed as transforming to community property.
Just the one whose parent it was. Unless their spouse was extremely close to their inlaw.
The IRS can put a lien on your home for past due child support and they will even charge interest.
Yes there are... if the person that is on the mortgage dies in a car wreck or something then the spouse will have a difficult time claiming the house unless the house was put in a will to the other who isn't on the mortgage. The house could go in default of payment and the spouse not on the mortgage wouldn't necessarily know about it.
tell youer spouse you have to work over time or on the days you do not work tell your spouse you got called in and then you can get the devorce papper then have her put her name on the pappers on the last day then you can go get remarry
The estate of each party should be examined in chronological order of death. The wife's estate would be distributed according to the laws of intestacy where she resided. If the deed of the home was in someone else's name, then that would also complicate it (e.g., tenants in common with husband's siblings, having inherited from grandpa...). If father's estate doesn't include the home, then any provisions about it in his will are irrelevant. If the deed or the intestate succession of the wife put the title into the hands of the children and not the surviving spouse, then the grandson has no present claim.
its lion
no. at least not legally, does not work if you are the wife or husband
If you do not include your spouse in the will, the court may hold the will invalid and allow the intestate laws to be applied. You don't have to have a will, or put anyone in it, but a spouse has specific rights to the estate, regardless of what the will says. Consult an attorney in your jurisdiction for specifics. I would like to