Yes, if the loan is at the bank where the debit card was issued.
No - a person's debts die with them. The spouse of a deceased person is not responsible fofr their outstanding bills.
Yes, it can, unless the spouse's business is incorporated.
The correct form is spouse's. Use this form when referring to something that belongs to one spouse. "Spouses'" is used when referring to something that belongs to multiple spouses.
If nothing else, the spouses Estate would have to pay it, if there was $$$ for more info see www.steveshorr.com/estate.planning.htm
Your dead spouse's estate is responsible for the credit card debt. In practice, this may amount to "you are responsible for it."
If the surviving spouse did not sign the credit card agreement then they are not responsible for it. However, the creditors could still come after the deceased spouse's estate (i.e. life insurance) for the balance of credit. You probably want to ask an estate attorney that question.
In most cases the spouse is going to be considered to have benefited from the debts of the spouse. Technically the estate should pay the bills, and that has to happen before the spouse gets any distribution.
* You can either phone the hotel and see if they still have a record of your spouse staying there or check your spouse's old credit card statements and telephone statements in case your spouse made the reservations over the phone.
yes usually the spouse is
Persephone's spouse is Hades.
no
The basic assumption is that yes, the spouse is jointly responsible. It is assumed that both spouses will benefit from the transactions.