You need to check with the attorney(s) to see if your case was ever brought before a judge. A divorce can be granted (in most states) without both (or either) parties present as long as your attorney is present. But a divorce has to be granted by a judge, and then the decree signed by the judge.
No
Maybe, California is a community property state. If the couple were not legally separated including the distribution of marital property, the Grant Deed may not protect the home from being deemed community property and being distributed accordingly.
This depends on what state you are in. In California, no matter if it is not in your spouse's name, everything gets separated 50/50.
The property would pass according to the California Laws of Intestacy. You can read the law at the link provided below.
" If there is no will , the procedure used for transferring property the deceased propert to his/her heirs is called Intestate succession. In the state of California the rules for dividing property are complex and dependent upon the relationship of kin: separate property: if the decedent has no will and leaves a spouse and one child, property is divided equally, 50-50. if there is a surviving spouse and two children, 1/3 goes to the spouse and 2/3 to the children. if there is no surviving spouse, property is divided qually among the children."
statute of limitations on property claims made in California
statute of limitations on property claims made in California
If there are children of the marriage, it's best to file where the children are located. If there are no children, you should file in whatever state you last resided together.
his daughter
Phoenix Property has listings all over the state of Arizona but they do not have listings in California. You are required to have a California Real Estate Brokers license to do business in California.
If husband is living with someone else but we are still married and not legally separated is property acquired by me subject to division in the state of Ohio?
His daughter