This may depend on the country your in, but I would suggest not. If the debt in question is a debt solely in your name, this will mean the other party on your joint account is not liable for your debt, so they cannot take funds from your joint account.
yes. i had it happen to me
No. Someone who pays the debt or an authorized user are not liable for the debt. Only someone named as a joint account holder can be held liable.
Only if the person were a joint debtor. If the person did not jointly incur the debt nor enter into a financial agreement as a cosigner he or she is not responsible for that debt.
Illinois is not a community property state, therefore a spouse who is not a joint account holder is not responsible for the credit card debt of the other spouse.
This may depend on the country your in, but I would suggest not. If the debt in question is a debt solely in your name, this will mean the other party on your joint account is not liable for your debt, so they cannot take funds from your joint account.
If you were not listed as a joint account holder you are not responsible for the debt.
Typically, in Alberta anyway, whether married or common-law, unless both persons' names are on the debt - i.e. joint mortgage, joint line of credit, joint credit card, etc. - the other party is NOT responsible for all or even half of the debt.
Only if you are a named joint debtor.
No. Although the spouse can be affected by the outstanding debt when applying for joint credit or if a joint bank account is levied by a judgment creditor.
yes. i had it happen to me
The debt may be your responsibility, everything is shared on a joint account. Even if you weren't the one who incurred the debt, if for some reason the other party can't meet their obligations (financial hardship, disappeared overseas, or died, for example) then you'll be liable for it instead.
In the state of North Carolina, it is very hard to seize a bank account. When an account is joint, it can not be seized unless the debt is the debt of both parties.
No. Someone who pays the debt or an authorized user are not liable for the debt. Only someone named as a joint account holder can be held liable.
Only if the person were a joint debtor. If the person did not jointly incur the debt nor enter into a financial agreement as a cosigner he or she is not responsible for that debt.
Illinois is not a community property state, therefore a spouse who is not a joint account holder is not responsible for the credit card debt of the other spouse.
In many cases, as long as the individual that has passed was the only person on the debt, then they are the only person that was responsible. If a spouse or additional person was listed on a debt as a joint owner, than the creditor can attempt to collect on the debt from the living even though the other joint borrower has passed away.