if it was your car before you were married, has stayed in your name only, he ha no legal claim to the car unless a judge gives it as part of the settlement.
Was this property bought before or after marriage? Either way, if you are married and want to sell real estate or a car or such, both spouses have to sign their consent to the transaction. So if your husband sold something behind your back, you might have a case. If it was bought before that, there's room for argument.
Your HUSBAND will have to pay the loan deficiency. HOWEVER - if the car was bought before marriage and your name is not on the title OR the loan papers, they cannot make YOU pay any part of it.
Yes. My husband had credit card debt from before we got married and purchased out house. It turned into a judgment lien and not it's attached to the house we bought together even though the house is in both our names and I had nothing to do with the credit card.
Not necisarily. If you are married and the house was bought after the marriage then no. If you are married and the house was bought before the marriage and the person that did not originaly buy the house made one payment on it or you had a joint account that the payments came out of, then they are half owner. If you are just living together with no marriage, then the house it the person's that bought it, but you have to be carful of common law marriage.
Raoul - Christine married him and he bought the monkey
Depends on the law and the courts where you are living. Get local advice.
yes he can but you both have to decide together who gets what stuff
Split them according to who brought them with them or who bought them. If both of you bought an item, make a trade for something you want.
Beneficiary unchanged.
Yes. Florida is a marrige state once you are married not matter if married before or after you are both now owners of that home. * If the house was in your name ONLY before you got married, he has no claim to it. * If the spouse was not added to the title then he does not have ownership rights to the property itself. He will however, be entitled to recover at least a portion if not half of the money he paid into the purchase of the property or a "trade off" in other assets to allow the equitable distribution of marital property.
If you live in a "community property" state, the house is yours.
Jane Addams did not have a husband. Her life partner was a woman by the name of Mary Rozet Smith. In letters, Jane described herself and Mary as married to each other. The pair met in 1890 and eventually bought a home together in Bar Harbor, Maine. During their relationship, Mary performed all the usual functions of a traditional wife for Jane, and they did not part until Mary's death in 1933. Before Jane died she burned many of her letters from Mary, therefore the exact nature of their companionship is unknown.