no not really it just means she dosent want to be with her hubby
Yes , you see the husband can easily file a case against her , for abandonment.
If the husband and wife are staying in New Jersey , and the husband leaves the wife without at all informing her, a case of abandonment can be very well filed.
i dont realoly know........................mebe 3 years?????????? O.O
no
Who ever leaves the home and does not come back is considered to have been the person who abandoned the remaining partner regardless of the reason...Sorry
Cheating is cheating no matter where it occurs and (with proof or uncontested) is still a legal cause for divorce. Abandonment is a different issue, particularly if your husband was in military service in Iraq. If the abandonment happened when he came back, that is another story.
No way!!!
He's worried about abandonment but not infidelity?? If you're wanting to divorce him, get a lawyer. A judge will grant you a divorce because of his infidelity and will help decide who gets the house.
Abandonment Approximately 17 States and the District of Columbia include abandonment in their definition of abuse or neglect, generally as a type of neglect. Approximately 18 States, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the Virgin Islands provide definitions for abandonment that are separate from the definition of neglect. In general, it is considered abandonment of the child when the parent's identity or whereabouts are unknown, the child has been left by the parent in circumstances in which the child suffers serious harm, or the parent has failed to maintain contact with the child or to provide reasonable support for a specified period of time.
If he is an ex-husband, he can't be charged with abandonment, you are already divorced. If you are refering to a child of his that you are raising, it probably isn't enough to establish abandonment.
His rights to the children do not change, but he leaves it open for her to file for custody based on possession or abandonment. He should never move out unless ordered to do so by the courts.
Yes you can.STATED BY AUTHOR