It depends on what state inwhich you reside but in most, if the account was decleared before the marrage and you did not contribute no, but if it was decleared after the marrage took place yes, just as you each consume each others debts. then yes you are entitled to half of the holdings but it also depends on the length of the marrage as well ten yrs. or longer you are entitled to half of whatever but so is he.
Maybe not but you can do something about it if the two of you are not sharing bank account. If your husband is not in your savings account, that will be stealing and that is illegal. You can ask the bank manager or even a lawyer.
No, you have an undivided interest in the entire bank account and it is up to you and the other joint tenants of the account to agree how the account will be used. If you are the sole remaining joint owner, then the entire account becomes yours. If you die before one or more other joint tenants, you and your estate have no further claim to the account, even if it was entirely your money that was deposited.
The husband gets the house.
What you receive depends on the state in which you live. You could be entitled to everything or you could be entitled to half of all marriage assets.
It will depend on what the will says. If there is no will, yes, they can normally expect to receive half the estate.
If you get it as part of the settlement or were married 10 or more years you can have half of his social security.
The courts can order a freeze on your assests during divorce or separation proceedings, especially if it is suspected that you might try to spirit money out of the account that might be legally half his.
Why is WHAT entitled ....?
I have a friend who is serving in a half way house.She needs to get a bank account.What would she have to do.
He sure will. Unless you have signed a pre-nup.
You should check with a probate attorney in Florida, but the intestate laws say that you are entitled to one half and his son would get the other half.
Are you filing "married filing jointly"? - then he is, if you file "married filing singely" the money is yours, legally. But ethically, I think it depends on if he is raising your son as his own and contributing to the relationship if he is entitled or not.