Well, if your married and you live separate, then you have the same rights you do as when you are married, except you are the boss of the house if he doesn't live there. If you are divorced and you live apart, then you don't have to do what your ex-husband says so you therefore have rights to do what you want, as long as what you are doing isn't illegal, but it doesn't involve your ex-husband if you are divorced.
No. In the US a husband has no rights in his wife's inheritance.No. In the US a husband has no rights in his wife's inheritance.No. In the US a husband has no rights in his wife's inheritance.No. In the US a husband has no rights in his wife's inheritance.
An ex-wife has no claim nor rights in her ex-husband's estate.An ex-wife has no claim nor rights in her ex-husband's estate.An ex-wife has no claim nor rights in her ex-husband's estate.An ex-wife has no claim nor rights in her ex-husband's estate.
No. His wife has no rights to the inheritance.
An ex-husband has no legal rights in his ex-wife's income. All spousal rights end with the divorce unless covered by a court order.An ex-husband has no legal rights in his ex-wife's income. All spousal rights end with the divorce unless covered by a court order.An ex-husband has no legal rights in his ex-wife's income. All spousal rights end with the divorce unless covered by a court order.An ex-husband has no legal rights in his ex-wife's income. All spousal rights end with the divorce unless covered by a court order.
Unanswered questions in The Wife's Lament include why her husband was exiled, why was a plot formulated to separate the husband and wife, and are they ever reunited.
You have no spousal rights whatsoever. You are not his wife. If he lied to you about being married you can file a criminal complaint.
Oregon is not a community property state. The husband is not an heir of his wife's father. The husband has no rights in or to to the real estate.
No, Georgia does not have dower rights. Dower rights are a legal concept that have been largely abolished in many states, including Georgia.
No. The inheritance is the property of the wife and her husband has no right, title or interest in it. For that reason she should make certain it always remains separate property, in a separate account.No. The inheritance is the property of the wife and her husband has no right, title or interest in it. For that reason she should make certain it always remains separate property, in a separate account.No. The inheritance is the property of the wife and her husband has no right, title or interest in it. For that reason she should make certain it always remains separate property, in a separate account.No. The inheritance is the property of the wife and her husband has no right, title or interest in it. For that reason she should make certain it always remains separate property, in a separate account.
No
I'd love to hear an answer as well. The wife won't listen to me when I say we are stupid for paying for 2 separate policies.
Do you mean that the husband and wife maintain two separate principle residences? The wife lives in Maryland and the husband lives in another state? If so, the technical answer is that you split the interest in proportion to each spouse's contribution to the account. For example, if they have a joint savings account to which the wife contributed 75% and the husband contributed 25%, then the wife pays tax on 75% of the interest. (That applies to joint accounts, of course. In the case of individual accounts, each spouse claims their own account.) In practice, you might not have kept the kind of detailed records this would require. Then just split them in half and hope you don't get audited.