Obscure Texas law makes a married authorized user liable?
Saturday, December 29th, 2007 at
7:22 pm
Comments Off
Persona asked:
My friends are married. Years ago, the wife opened a credit card account and listed her husband’s name without his knowledge, signature, or permission. She racked up a debt and stopped paying, so the creditors are going after both. She just filed for bankruptcy so her end is clear, and now the CC is about to take it to court. Normally, he would only be liable if he was a joint account owner, but Cheap Viagra Online Without Prescription according to a cheap attorney, there is an obscure Texas law that says he is because they are married. Is this true?
My friends are married. Years ago, the wife opened a credit card account and listed her husband’s name without his knowledge, signature, or permission. She racked up a debt and stopped paying, so the creditors are going after both. She just filed for bankruptcy so her end is clear, and now the CC is about to take it to court. Normally, he would only be liable if he was a joint account owner, but Cheap Viagra Online Without Prescription according to a cheap attorney, there is an obscure Texas law that says he is because they are married. Is this true?


