It is entirely dependent upon the laws in your area, but generally it depends on the types of bills, and what you mean by "leave him." If his name is attached to a loan (i.e. a car loan), then his credit will be affected by a failure to pay the loan on time. If his name is attached to the lease/mortgage on your house/apartment then he is also responsible for rent. If he is not living in the house, however, he is not responsible for the electric bill, the sewer bill, and so forth. Unless, you are getting a divorce, and he is the major income for the family. In that case you should be entitled to alimony, depending on the laws of your area. I am not a lawyer. Your mileage may very.
Yes. It is if you leave it for to long you get a fine for it but you have an resonable amount of time to pay it off before you get a fine for the bill.
you don't have to leave your house to pay the bills
It depends on the state you live in! Most often, if both people have established residency and get mail delivered to that address, pay bills together or are responsible for bills, and have a financial obligation or interest to the residence - then NO, no spouse can lock the other spouse out. One can volunteer to leave, or police may ask one party to leave for a specified time (if they get involved), but the right to the residence still remains. The judge can remove a party from the residence, but that would be because of a court order/restraining order/protective order.
pay your bills on time ... but strangely you have to leave a balance running.
The estate is going to have to resolve debts. It is likely to have to be liquidated anyway.
Leave him.
No not necessarily he just may help try and find you a way to be covered for a bit and then you will have to do it yourself but in the end still leave.
If your husband's girlfriend is mature and responsible and your children like her then there is no reason the children can't be left with her. If you don't feel she is responsible to look after them or the children don't like her then have your husband return the children to you if he has to leave their residence.
Yes. It is if you leave it for to long you get a fine for it but you have an resonable amount of time to pay it off before you get a fine for the bill.
Sorry, but Yes ... if BOTH signed ,then Both are responsible... if it goes to court a judge can decide if he deems fit that only one party take over the lease. Good luck
You can't. Set up automatic payments before you leave, or have somebody you trust do it for you such as a parent, sibling, wife, husband, etc.
No, I do not have a husband!
A lien will be filed against it, it'll be sold at auction, and you'll still be responsible for paying any remaining balance due on the car.
You can be separated and still live in the same house. No one has to move.The mortgage payment is made by the person whos name is on the mortgage. If it is in both names you are both responsible.
no! what is your husband doing to make you want to leave!
Talk to her about your views that you want this. She might agree upon that and leave her husband. It depends on her and it is her take on this.
When someone dies, any debts they leave are paid out of their 'estate' (the money and property they leave behind). You're only responsible for their debts if you had a joint loan or agreement or provided a loan guarantee - you aren't automatically responsible for a husband's, wife's or civil partner's debts.