Most likely. But you are entitled to 50 percent of hers as well.
50 percent
She is entitled to 50% of the portion of your Pension of the years you were married. For example, If you had a Pension fund for 7 years, prior to your marriage, then married for 11 years, she is entitled only to 50% of the portion of the Pension you acquired during the 11 years you were married, and not the 7 years of the Pension, prior to your marriage.
No, the wife is entitled to what the court deems fair.
It appears that the Indian government restored the 70 percent pension to defense personnel. The previous ruling was that defense personnel would only get a 50 percent pension.
Really depends on how long you have been married, the state you live in/were married in and how good your lawyer is. Typically any marriage lasting longer than 7 years or bearing kids that ends in divorce leaves the spouse with at least 50% if not more.
The typical U.S. pension plan had about 39 percent of its assets in U.S. stocks, 20 percent in bonds, 14 percent in the company's own stock, 9.5 percent in international stocks
No. Heirs are not entitled to anything if there is a will that says otherwise.
25% Gotten a divorce. 50% has had kids. 25% dont have kids but are married.
You will need to contact your company's payroll department to know if your pension check is going to go up two percent because of the tax increase. Pension are privately owned by companies.
roughly 31 percent of all U.S. household assets were held in pension funds in 2002, continuing a long trend; the figure stood at 29.1 percent in 1998 and 23.3 percent in 1990.
Many people who divorce do have a clause in the decree regarding insurance beneficiaries. If the decree is written this way and/or the policy includes her as a beneficiary, then she certainly has rights.
Major number of seperations end in divorce. What is the number?