Well the easiest thing to do is sit down with your parents and ex spouse and discuss and see what would be the best arrangement for all of you. If it were myself and I felt uncomfortable, I would probably move out if my parents insisted to allow the ex to stay. If you believe you are in imminent danger to be in the same space as your ex I would consider contacting a lawyer about a restraining order if you feel your life is in danger. Other then that I hate to say it, but suck it up and live with the situation since you don't own the home you are living in.
If it was taken out before you were 18, it's your parents. After that, it depends on the kind of student loan, and who signed the papers.
of course not, if you signed the papers then you can't return it.
You couldn't have gotten a legal separation because you would have signed papers to have your ex stay away from you. You need to see a lawyer and get these papers drawn up. Make up your mind! Either separation and he doesn't live there anymore or divorce. Separation is best because it gives each of you time to reflect on your past relationship and a chance to cool off so you can make a better judgment call as to whether to get divorced or not. See that lawyer, get those papers and then he'll have to leave.
On insurance papers, signed at state simply means the person who is purchasing the insurance signed the legal document. These usually need to be signed in front of a notary.
I'd suggest seeking a lawyer as soon as possible. If nothing about your separation was ever formalized, you may be heir to everything of his not specified in his will - including his debt.
The Federalist Papers were all signed with the pen name "Publius," but were written anonymously by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison and John Jay.
yes
Yes, as long as you have a parents consent and other legal papers signed by both parties it is allowed.
A person should be able to get a down payment back on a car if papers have not yet been signed. Only after the papers have been singed is the purchase official.
No, a marital separation letter is not legal until it is filed with the court system. It also must be signed, dated, and notarized.
If you are a adopted minor it is your adoptive parents that are your guardians. The court is the only one who can take away and give guardianship. Once your birth parents signed the papers they agreed to never getting their parental rights back. The courts don't allow it.
For the US, December 1941 until August/Sept 1945. Japan signed her surrender papers in September. Germany signed their surrender papers in May 1945.