Ask this question to a lawyer. Some lawyers offer free consultation for upto an hour. Asking this type of questions on web may get you wrong advise.
Yes. STATED BY AUTHOR
No. Florida like several other states treat marital debts as being separate when they are not jointly incurred.
No. The person named on the credit agreement is solely responsible for all debts incurred on the card. The only exception is - if the account is in joint names - and BOTH parties signed the agreement. In that case - each signatory would be equally responsible for the debt.
No.
No, Tennessee is not a community property state. Married couples living in non community property states are not responsible for debts incurred solely by either spouse.
Maryland is not a community property state, therefore the surviving spouse is not responsible for repayment of debt that was solely incurred by the deceased. The debts will become a part of the deceased's estate and will be handled according to state probate laws.
if i need a car and i am in bankruptucy how can i get a letter of incurred debt
The fact that the couple are still married but not living together is not relevant. New York is not a community property state, that means each spouse is solely responsible for any debts made that were not jointly incurred.
No, Florida is not a community property state therefore debts not jointly incurred belong solely to the person who holds the account. In Florida married couples are generally presumed to hold jointly owned property as Tenancy By The Entirety (TBE) which makes such property exempt from creditor action when only one spouse is responsible for the debt.
It may not be a "sole" party...it is everyone that signed as a responsible party (primary and co-signers) for the line of credit that was used....they are responsible to pay the charges and therefore are responsible if it is in default and the charge hasn't been paid.
if it is under your name and she is an additional card holder but the bill comes to you I think you are responsible for the debt.It might be worth asking your credit card provider.
No, Virginia is not a community property state. Therefore spouses are solely responsible for their own debts as long as those debts are not incurred jointly.