If you were divorced in Ohio, ask somebody there or ask somebody in Florida!
No. Your spouse has no right to your parent's estate. Following that, your spouse has no right to any property that you inherit at the time of your inheritance. If you are concerned about protecting your inheritance from any future claims in any future divorce action you should consult with an attorney now for advice on how to protect it from any future claims.
You have a few options. You can file for divorce in the state that you were married in (even if it is different from Ohio or Florida), or in any state that you are our spouse is a resident of. It would be a good idea for you to file first and in Ohio so that you do not have the burden of traveling to Florida but you do have a few options for filing.
I am having same problem. Wife says she will contest
Yes, Ohio is a no fault divorce state.
If she married the other man before she was divorced from you, her marriage to the other man is not valid. I have come across this many times working in Immigration. She would have to get remarried to the other man once the divorce with you was final in order for it to be legal and valid. Divorces are not reopened. Once you are divorced it is final.
Ohio state
credit card debt is reserved to all the names that were used when the credit card was applied for so even in divorce situations where the judge has split the debt it is not legally removed from you if your name was on the account
In Ohio, a legal notice for divorce typically needs to be published for a period of three consecutive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation in the county where the divorce case is filed. After the final publication, an Affidavit of Publication must be filed with the court as proof of compliance with the publication requirement.
There isn't one. You can go and apply for a marriage license when you walk out with the final divorce decree. Yes there is a grace period. i just got divorced today and we went to get a marriage license and they told us we had to wait 2 weeks because the judge could change his mind.
yes
Yes, Ohio is a no fault divorce state.