Some of the animals that will burrow in the foundation of your house would be raccoons bats and possums.
Squirrels are not usually good with other pets. It is actually law in most areas that you cannot have wild animals as pets anyway. I would not trust a squirrel around any house hold pets.
A cow could be sold to a slaughter house for a few hundred dollars. The meat of a cow is around 6 dollars a pound and only 175 pounds on the average cow can be used.
Pioneer children may have been tasked with feeding the chickens because they needed to do chores around the house. This would have been considered an easy and necessary task.
a pug a pug a pug a pug
Please kindly note the decree said that the husband would buy the wife a house of her own , and no trustee part appeared in the decree , so the husband is wrong.
I would say yes. If your husband is pretty handy around the house and can follow some electrical directions clearly, then you should have no problem installing this on your own.
Its Either You Get The House Or He Gets The House. But If I Were In That Situation, I Would Not Buy The House At All. I Would Be Looking For Other Houses Around It And Similar To It.
your husband will always support you and
Yes. The husband would be the sole owner of the property and could leave it to his wife in his will.
if you don't trust him, you don't love him. BUT if he intentionally breaks your trust he doesn't love you and a trustless relationship WILL fall. its the same principle vice versa.
== == == == == == == == I guess it just comes down to, if you trust your husband enough to let him flirt with other woman..
Then said person is really not your friend. They are using you to become closer with your husband. They have already or is trying to manipulate you in such a way that they've gained your trust to be around your husband without you. I would either stop it right away or take your situation as an opportunity to set your "supposed" friend and even your husband both up to see where their loyalty lies with you.
yes and that would be horible Do you mean, could the person involved with your husband be legally charged with an offence? It seems unlikely; the legal system would clog up and grind to a halt. If you mean, has that person betrayed your trust, the answer is yes, and so has your husband.
Refinance
Probably in there house.
I assume that you are the sole owner of the house. You would need to check your state laws of intestacy to determine what your husband's rights would be if you died intestate, or, without a will. On the other hand, you could provide your husband with a life estate in your will.