You and the "someone else" create and sign a new deed for the home that includes the wife's name, and then you record it with the registry (or assessor, or local equivalent).
Have a deed prepared wherein husband signs deed deeding property to him and his wife.
Yes. The deed is the instrument by which title to real property is transferred to a new owner. The deed and the title are not separate.
He must execute a quitclaim deed with you as the grantee.
removing husband from home when name is not on the deed?
Deed of ownership
If you are only on the title, then your credit will not be affected.
No, a will not over rule a deed or title. For example, if a husband and wife are married and their car is in the wife's name alone, the dead husband's will not overrule the title.
All parties on title to the home must sign the loan documents; so, your husband can not do a loan on his own. Some states allow the spouse to sign the note (the debt) but not the deed; that would mean you are on the loan only but not the title; in that case, your husband would be able to encumber the property with another loan in his loan only.
She'll need to sign it over to you.
car is in wifes and my name, she got a title loan unknowingly from the husband. She defaulted, can they take the car from the husband?
Not if the wife's name is on the title. She is the only one who can sell the car.
Yes. You can be added by having the current owner execute a new deed with your name and their name as grantees. You must decide how title will be held between you. You may or may not need to use a straw depending on the laws in your state. You should seek the advice of an attorney to make certain the deed is valid in your state and the desired tenancy is created in the new deed.
It depends on the tenancy recited in the deed. If the deed recites that you will hold title as joint tenants with the right of survivorship then husband's interest will automatically pass to wife upon his death.