a spouse
spouse - marriage partner
If you are referring to the law of necessities related to medical bills, then the answer is yes. If one spouse receives medically necessary treatment (plastic surgery probably wouldn't apply) then it is assumed that it was necessary for the marriage and therefore the other spouse can be held liable in addition to the spouse who received the treatment.
In China, a marriage may be nullified for the following reasons: bigamy, spouse with a blood relationship, spouse with a disease imported to the marriage and spouse below the lawful age of marriage.
If this was the first time the spouse cheated and they are remorseful and want to stay in the marriage then yes, it is worth trying to save the marriage by seeing a marriage counselor who is not there to blame either spouse, but to give them the tools to strengthen their marriage. If the spouse continually cheats then it is best to get a divorce.
Only if you value your spouse and your marriage.
Depends on the will
An "uncle by marriage" would be your spouse's Aunt's husband.
Adultery is when you cheat on your spouse and divorce is when you end the marriage from your spouse.
In the state of Florida the definition of desertion of a marriage means that one spouse walks out of their obligations to another spouse. This is more commonly referred to as marriage abandonment.
The spouse can, but not the children.
no.