Seriously, for one, if this were to occur, how exactly could one even prove that they didnt receive the half they were entitled to? the other person could easily say hey, i gave you your money and its just their word against the others, there seems to me to be no concrete way to dispute that angle.
It depends: a. No - If the spouse writes a check out of a single account held by the person writing the check b. Yes - If the spouse writes a check out of a single account that is held by their spouse and the person writing the check is not a joint owner of the account. To be simple: Writing a check from an account that is not held by the person writing the check is a crime.
Yes. Forging a check is a crime irrespective of whose check is being forged. Even if the forger is the spouse of the person affected, it is a crime and the forger can be legally prosecuted. You can formally raise a legal complaint against your spouse with the cops to take things forward.
can you attribute crime to aggression or aggression to crime e.g. which one is a stimulus and is a response
Cheating on your spouse is not considered a crime in the legal sense, but it can have legal consequences in the form of divorce proceedings and settlements.
Not unless you are disabled and your spouse is a caregiver.
It depends on the crime, where you were when your spouse did whatever he/she did, and whether you have an allabi. GET A LAWYER
Yes, cheating on your spouse is not a crime in the legal sense, but it can have legal consequences in terms of divorce proceedings and settlements. It is considered a breach of trust and can have serious emotional and relational consequences.
No, you cannot sue their spouse. You may be able to sue the estate, particularly if the estate was enriched by the crime. Cases of embezzlement come to mind as a possibility.
There is no law by which a person would be "locked up" or charged with a crime for an age difference with a spouse. You could be confusing this with statutory rape, where rape with a child is a crime.
If your spouse committed are crime or was involved in a disagreement then yes any one can file a suit against your spouse. If you spouse and done nothing wrong the suit will most likely be thrown out by a judge.
yes, because any crime is a violation of probation, so abuse is considered asault which is a crime.
yes, but it would be a federal crime in the USA unless you had his or her permission.