If you are on the deed to the property you own a one half interest.
If you are on the deed to the property you own a one half interest.
If you are on the deed to the property you own a one half interest.
If you are on the deed to the property you own a one half interest.
If you are on the deed to the property you own a one half interest.
Depending on the state laws all property owned by a husband at any point during their marriage, regardless of when it was purchased, could become part of the marital assets.
West Virginia is a separate property state. A husband or wife can hold solely owned property. If the property was acquired during the marriage a judge may take the property into consideration during the distribution of marital assets pursuant to a divorce. It depends on the situation.West Virginia is a separate property state. A husband or wife can hold solely owned property. If the property was acquired during the marriage a judge may take the property into consideration during the distribution of marital assets pursuant to a divorce. It depends on the situation.West Virginia is a separate property state. A husband or wife can hold solely owned property. If the property was acquired during the marriage a judge may take the property into consideration during the distribution of marital assets pursuant to a divorce. It depends on the situation.West Virginia is a separate property state. A husband or wife can hold solely owned property. If the property was acquired during the marriage a judge may take the property into consideration during the distribution of marital assets pursuant to a divorce. It depends on the situation.
Property owned prior to marriage is not considered community property unless it was converted to community property by some action by the parties.Property owned prior to marriage is not considered community property unless it was converted to community property by some action by the parties.Property owned prior to marriage is not considered community property unless it was converted to community property by some action by the parties.Property owned prior to marriage is not considered community property unless it was converted to community property by some action by the parties.
This will depend on whether your husband added you to the title or left the house to you in his will. Because he owned the property before you were married, he could leave it to another person in his will if he never added you to the title.
No. Anything either party owned before the marriage is considers separate property. The only way you maybe could get a portion of the land is if it was combined with marital property (i.e. a marital home was built on the land)
Of course not. If the property is owned by husband and wife only the wife can consent to the sale of her share. The husband can only sell his own interest and not his wife's.Of course not. If the property is owned by husband and wife only the wife can consent to the sale of her share. The husband can only sell his own interest and not his wife's.Of course not. If the property is owned by husband and wife only the wife can consent to the sale of her share. The husband can only sell his own interest and not his wife's.Of course not. If the property is owned by husband and wife only the wife can consent to the sale of her share. The husband can only sell his own interest and not his wife's.
If your husband died and co-owned property with other people, what was specified in the will. If there's not a will, it will go through probate court.
I know in my state, Louisiana, that would be considered an inheritance, and therefore, not community property. So, no, your husband would have no claim to it.But you need to check the inheritance laws of your state.In the USIn the United States a woman is allowed to own property in her own right. Her husband has no control over property she inherits. That sort of practice went out with the Married Women's Property Acts beginning in the nineteenth century which were originally designed to protect their property from their husband's creditors. In a community property state generally, a spouse's separate property consists of property the spouse owned before marriage or acquired by gift or inheritance during the marriage.
If the property is owned by the husband and wife as tenants by the entirety a lien for the debt of one will not affect the property.
The term community property state means that the community property in a marriage divided equally between the two parties when there is a divorce. This property usually does not include property owned before the marriage.
If it is marital property it is jointly owned and either party can do with it what they like. If it was separate property you are liable for the damages.
No, community property refers only to that property that is gained during the marriage. However, if you use community property or income earned during the marriage to continue mortgage payments, to improve, etc, then a portion of it does become community property.