He doesn't have the legal right to have anything to do with his ex-wife's funeral unless she expressed that right in her will after the divorce. If not, that right belongs to her legal next of kin, children then parents then siblings.
Of course not. If he is the executor of a current will he has a better chance.
yes
No. Their legal relationship has been dissolved.
if you and your wife or husband are divorced , then you go to court and get it all settled and you are very welcomed for letting me answer this questing thank you
You should spend some time searching for any evidence of your wife's divorce from her first husband. If there is no divorce decree then she was not legally divorced. If she wasn't legally divorced then her marriage to you was not legal. There are many legal ramifications to that situation. You should spend an hour consulting with an attorney to discuss the situation and your options.
If the husband wants to provide financial support to his wife, he can certainly do it. It is not mandatory, unless it is part of the legal separation or divorce agreement.
Then you're NOT divorced. Both husband and wife MUST sign the divorce papers for the disillusion of marriage to be legal.
Under health insurance rules no. I have seen that in a divorce decree but that is a legal issue not an insurance one.
You are only legally divorced after you file for and are granted legal divorce by the state. Period.
Yes, Nancy Grace did get divorced. She and her former husband, David Linch, divorced in 2007 after being married for over a decade. The couple has twins together, and Grace has since continued her career in television and legal commentary.
To determine if you are divorced, check your current legal status. If the divorce has been finalized by a court, then you are legally divorced. If not, you are still married.
The name of the actual father of the child should go on the birth certificate. If you are not legally divorced, then your legal husband would be automatically considered to be the child's father by law. If the child has a different father, he can complete a voluntary acknowledgement of the paternity of a child, in which he signs that he is the child's father and is therefore put on the birth certificate and named as the legal father. The hospital will help with this after the baby is born.
Yes, but note that step-father does not imply any legal rights as far as guardianship, support or inheritance rights go.