The usual punishment would be an arrest followed by jail time for forgery and theft. Plus, you will be asked to repay the money you stole from your ex wifes bank account including a penalty. All in all, you will end up repaying the money with interest & penalty plus end up serving jail time.
Nope - anyone who uses a card or account belonging to another person without their consent commits FRAUD.
If the debt is on a shared account, then yes, the wife's pay can be garnished even if the husband was the one who ran the debt up.
If the bank account is, in fact, under both, the husbands and wife's name, than either can deposit a check into the account. If the check is written out to both names and the account is only in one name then both individuals would have to be present with ID in order to deposit the check.
The right to tell her to make him a Semich
Only if he has authority to act as her agent by virtue of a valid power of attorney.
no
If you reside in a community property state it can be seized. If you have deposited any of your money into the account it can be seized. The best thing to do is to have separate accounts.
If they are attached to the same account. My wifes card has the same numbers as mine.
In "The Wife's Lament," it is implied that the wife is exiled as punishment for some unspecified crime or wrongdoing. The exact reason for her exile is not explicitly stated in the poem, leaving it open to interpretation by the reader.
Nope - anyone who uses a card or account belonging to another person without their consent commits FRAUD.
yes they do have wifes
The Human Resources Department/Payroll Department of your company should be able to advise you on how to stop the EFT deposits to an account. You should be able to change the deposit to go to a different account or to be issued to you as a standard paycheck.
24 wifes
A wife's (spouse's) money is only protected from the husband's (other spouse's) creditors if any of the following are true: * The couple lives in a non-community property state and the loan/credit account is only in the husband's name * The couple lives in a community property state, the loan/credit account is only in the husband's name, the loan existed before the marriage and has provably not been used in any way to benefit the wife
he had more then 20 wifes
14 wifes
If the debt is on a shared account, then yes, the wife's pay can be garnished even if the husband was the one who ran the debt up.