no
I would call him my "exhusband".
Not if that child is married then yes the parents would be responsible.
Yes, you are. That is what cosigning means. The lender didn't think the borrower could (or would) repay them, so they only loaned him the money because you said you would pay if he didn't.
If they are married they are emancipated through the fact they are married, so I would say no.
Well, you CAN default but the co-signer would then be completely responsible for paying the loan that you defaulted on. The co-signers credit will be impacted by your default and all subsequent collections.
It would depend on whether they are legally separated. If they are still married, she could be held responsible.
If you are an adult, you are responsible for your debts and assets. If you were married, and the debts and assets were joint, then you and your spouse would both be responsible for them, unless you divorced, and it was settled in court at the time of the divorce.
I'm not trying to be funny, but if you were married (legally) to him at the time of death, yes - who else would be responsible for it?
If you are still legally married, you can be held responsible. That would be the benefit of getting a divorce.
Unfortunately, yes. If you were married when these bills occurred then yes you are responsible. It is like property of a married couple- anything that is acquired during a marriage belongs to both of you. So if these bills were acquired during your marriage then yes you are responsible. If your wife were still alive you would be held liable if you were still married. So just because she is deceased does not change this, Sorry.
Since a married couple are considered to be one economic entity, yes. The wife would be held responsible.
Because he is the worst kind of person: faithless, friendless and completely untrustworthy. Who's responsible this?