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Can my partners ex kick her out the house.
Comments
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They were married for 3 years.
He is the father of the twins.
She works part time.
She gets child tax credits
No CSA payments are made from the Ex.0 -
grubster5676 wrote: »Home rights includethe right:
- to stay in your home and not be excluded, unless a court order prevents you from being there
- to ask the court to allow you to return to the home if you moved out
If you aren't a legal owner
You have home rightsif you're married or in a civil partnership but you aren't a legal owner ofyour home because your name isn't on the register of title or the title deeds.
If you are the only legal owner
If you're married orin a civil partnership and you're the legal owner of your home because onlyyour name is on the register of title or the title deeds, your partner has homerights.
It seems you are reading the bits you want to read from the article.
"- to ask the court to allow you to return to the home if you moved out"
Means if your partner was the one that had moved out.
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grubster5676 wrote: »No CSA payments are made from the Ex.
But he was paying the mortgage?0 -
What much does he pay for the mortgage?Try to be a rainbow in someone's cloud.0
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I asked because he could well be paying far more than he would via the CSA.
I'm sure he is , even if he had the mortgage running 10 years.
Plus the Op's friend would have to open a case with the CSA via CMS, the OP can check online using the calculator and some information from the friend.0 -
From the Shelter England site (they have other sites for different parts of the country).
http://england.shelter.org.uk/get_advice/relationship_breakdown/matrimonial_home_rights
http://england.shelter.org.uk/get_advice/relationship_breakdown/married_couples_and_civil_partners0 -
heartbreak_star wrote: »Me and OH cohabit, are not married or engaged, and we are in our 30s...to call each other boyfriend and girlfriend would feel silly.
Therefore "partner" it is. Simples!
OP, I hope you get this sorted, it sounds a bit of a mess
HBS x
Official forms now use the term "partner" - married or not, regardless of age.....and quite right too.:T
Boyfriend/girlfriend sounds daft if you are over about 21, and finance/fianc!e sounds like something from a Victorian novelette lol :silenced:
"Partner" suits all scenarios, married, living together or neither.
Lin
You can tell a lot about a woman by her hands..........for instance, if they are placed around your throat, she's probably slightly upset.
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Really ? So if you had met someone a few times , went out , spent a few nights at theirs or they stayed at yours , dated basically - would you refer to that person as "partner "?The word "dilemma" comes from Greek where "di" means two and "lemma" means premise. Refers usually to difficult choice between two undesirable options.
Often people seem to use this word mistakenly where "quandary" would fit better.0
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