If you live in a separate property state that would mean your spouse wants to keep that property separate from you. If your spouse dies that property would not automatically pass to you. It would pass to the heirs at law or according to the will. It may also be considered separate property in the case of a divorce and the distribution of marital property.
If you live in a separate property state that would mean your spouse wants to keep that property separate from you. If your spouse dies that property would not automatically pass to you. It would pass to the heirs at law or according to the will. It may also be considered separate property in the case of a divorce and the distribution of marital property.
If you live in a separate property state that would mean your spouse wants to keep that property separate from you. If your spouse dies that property would not automatically pass to you. It would pass to the heirs at law or according to the will. It may also be considered separate property in the case of a divorce and the distribution of marital property.
If you live in a separate property state that would mean your spouse wants to keep that property separate from you. If your spouse dies that property would not automatically pass to you. It would pass to the heirs at law or according to the will. It may also be considered separate property in the case of a divorce and the distribution of marital property.
If you live in a separate property state that would mean your spouse wants to keep that property separate from you. If your spouse dies that property would not automatically pass to you. It would pass to the heirs at law or according to the will. It may also be considered separate property in the case of a divorce and the distribution of marital property.
since 50 percent of marriages end in divorce i'd keep the houe in your name..it was yours before you got married and you want to keep possesion in case the union doesn't last
it's your house. it's your house.
you can be prosecuted for forgery or worse attempted theft
I am going through a divorice and my husband bought a house in Texas during the marrage, but my name is not on the title. he put it in his living trust . we are full time resadent in Florida. am i intitaled to any part of the house. we have been married only 17 months.
can you have insurance on a car if the title is not in your name? Generally, no. You don't have anything to insure (called insurable interest). The only time this is permitted is with spouses. The car's title may be in either name, but may be on the others insurance.
A woman who is told that the house that she lives in is not either hers or hers or her husbands can check this out at the Land Title Office. If her name is not on the title then the house is not hers, but, if brought into a court of law this sometimes can be changed as long as the husband owns the house.
Speaker of the House
Yes.
You took a car and the Title was in the spouses name. If you are not a co-signer and your name is not on the Title he can take you to court as well for any damages or depreciation you made to the car. You can be arrested for theft. If you hold no legal ownership of the car, it is theft.
Your house adress because your house is haunted!
something
The "quitclaim" does not establish ownership or automatically create new ownership of the house. The only way to add another name to the ownership deed is to refinance the home mortgage.
There is no other 'formal' name for it. It is sometimes referred to as the "lower house of Congress" but that is merely a descriptive name and not an official title.