Yes, husband can refuse to leave the house unless an order of court compels him to do so. If, for example, the parties are in the process of getting divorced, a party might be more reluctant to leave the house because he, in those circumstances, wants to protect his "right" to live in the house and not give the impression that he is happy to forfeit his right to live in the house. If the husband is abusive, the wife can apply for a protection order until the divorce is finalized, and ask that the husband leave the house in the interim. The court can then decide whether the request should be granted or not. yes they can but you should let them go because they might hurt you
You can try to separate from a spouse if he or she does not want to leave the home. You will need a lawyer. Your lawyer can ask the judge to have your spouse leave the residence while you are going through your proceedings.
Nothing. If you share the house, you have no authority to kick him or her out.
If there is a pending divorce, you can seek to have the court award possession of the house to one of you individually.
Why should he? You could move instead.
Even in Illinois both must file for divorce, then only will things move forward.
Any subsequent contestation hearing must take place in the state where the dissolution (divorce) petition is filed.
The options include: stop paying the mortgage and let the bank repossess the house; pay the entire mortgage yourself; divorce the spouse and move out; divorce the spouse and stay, while your spouse moves out; find out why your spouse refuses to pay half of the mortgage and see if some agreement can be reached; seek cheaper housing; go on an extended backpack tour of Europe; enlist in the army. That's about it.
To get a divorce without moving out of your house, you will need to get your spouse to move out, or reach an agreement about continuing to live (separately) in the home.
The divorce should have included a motion to this effect, otherwise not required to.
When you get a divorce ,if your spouse has moved in with you ,you can ask them to move out and if you have had a child with your ex-spouse your child lives with you or you can have shared custody of the child but if it is a teenager when you and your previous partner get a divorce you will ask them to choose who they will live with and they can either choose you or your ex-spouse or shared custody
That falls under the category of tough luck. If the spouse can not afford to move, the other would have to agree to let them stay. If they do not agree, the other has to go.
The best is for you to move out. You can't force him but maybe you might be able to convince him through talking.
no
The State of Florida is a no-fault divorce state, meaning the court will not assign fault to either party for the divorce. Neither spouse can prevent the other from obtaining a divorce. Marriage is not a prison and an inmate who is incarcerated for life cannot impose a life sentence on their spouse. She/he has the right to move on with their life. The inmate does not have to consent to the divorce.
Not without permission of the court.
With the children? 50 miles