You can refinance your property if a bank agrees to refinance your property. If they find out you are separated, they could choose not to lend you more money.
Maybe, California is a community property state. If the couple were not legally separated including the distribution of marital property, the Grant Deed may not protect the home from being deemed community property and being distributed accordingly.
NO.NO.NO.NO.
Yes, they can. You and your spouse are legally a single financial entity. Any property acquired by your spouse after your marriage is community property, with you having an equal interest. The only property not considered community property would be what your spouse owned prior to your marriage.
If the property rightfully belongs to the spouse, then yes they can sell it. If they do not rightfully own the property, then they cannot legally sell the personal property.
no there are no rights
if their going threw a divorce yes she can get him for commitidentity theft. cause it a marriage property. and it has to settle in court by the judge. and the law will made him bring it back unit every thing is settlein court .
Not immediately. When you inherit something it is separate property because it was specifically designated to go to you. If you put these funds in a joint account or share them with your spouse then it would likely be deemed as transforming to community property.
Yes, if the spouse has an ownership interest in the property.Yes, if the spouse has an ownership interest in the property.Yes, if the spouse has an ownership interest in the property.Yes, if the spouse has an ownership interest in the property.
No. Property acquired during the marriage cannot be partitioned, sold, transferred or otherwise without the consent of both spouse's to the action or the approval of the court.
It depends on the state that the property is in. In a separate property state the spouse would not acquire an interest. In a community property state if the property is acquired by deed during the marriage it becomes community property.
In Texas, when a spouse dies, the surviving spouse is typically entitled to the house if it was community property or if it was left to them in the deceased spouse's will.