It will have no affect on her credit. Only the person(s) who are a party to a bankruptcy have it noted on any crediting reportage.
yes
WOW...
I believe so - When you get married you assume all the debts.
It depends on where you live. Laws vary across states and countries.
No. Only if you are a co-applicant you assume the debt. I'm not 100% sure about govt debt though.
Only if they are legally married. Effective June 26, 2013, same-sex spouses are treated the same as opposite-sex spouses under federal bankruptcy law.
No.
if your legally married when you file bankruptcy, you must include every single asset including the spouses. depends on what type of bk you file. you may be able to keep your assets.
As long as you were legally divorced from your first two spouses you are free to marry again in the United States. Remember that you can only be married to one person at a time. You cannot remarry until that marriage has been dissolved legally.
Bankruptcy has some effect on both spouses regardless of where they live. Unless the two spouses have taken great care to ensure that their assets are entirely separated from one another, then there is likely to be some part where the spouse will be financially affected by a bankruptcy. For details you should contact a Minnesota bankruptcy lawyer (see related links). They will be able to provide specific information about how a spouse could be affected by bankruptcy.
Someone is not allowed to remarry without presenting a divorce decree. This is the only way that a potential spouse can be safe from fraudsters who are hiding other spouses.
No, unless you both filed a joint BK petition.
yes
Well, it looks like English... I guess the answer is yes.
I married a woman. She is now my spouse and I am hers.
A married couple can file for bankruptcy separately in Illinois, as it is not uncommon for one spouse to have a significant amount of debt in their name only. However, if spouses have debt they want to discharge that they're both liable for, they should file together. Otherwise, the creditor will simply demand payment for the entire amount from the spouse who didn't file. When a married couple face bankruptcy, they can file jointly, one can file while the other doesn't or they can file separately at the same time.
WOW...