This depends on the structure of the loan, who it is received from, where you are lving, where you are marrying, and several minor factors.
In some case, your partner will not be liable for the loan, as it your own personal contract and they cannot enter it. In others, your debts are pooled.
No. Your present spouse had no legal responsibility for you before you were married.
The only debt you're liable for - is anything in joint names. Any debt solely in his name died with him.
The only people liable for a debt are the ones who agreed to pay it, the original signers of the loan documents. Of course in the event of a death there could be a claim filed against the estate.
I would say yes. You are treated as a married couple, so if the debt occurred while you were together, you are both equally liable. To the IRS this doesn't mean that you each pay half, it means whoever has the money pays it all. If either is due a refund, they will take it to apply it to the debt.
No. The only exception would be a married couple residing in a community property state.
No you are not, If you deglared bankruptcy, that cancels your debt
You are not personally liable for the debt. The estate is liable for the debt. If the law suit results in payment, it would have to be used to settle the debts.
He is. What he comes to the marriage with is his, including debt.
no
Only if the married couple lived in a community property state.
No. Someone who pays the debt or an authorized user are not liable for the debt. Only someone named as a joint account holder can be held liable.
A dead person in any state is not liable for debt. The deceased's estate is responsible for the debts to the extent there are assets in the estate to pay them.