My husband moved out and began using his income to support only him, leaving me with all expenses on the current residence. He rented a separate apartment and contributed nothing to the last month that he lived here. I asked if he planned to pay anything at the original residence and he refused, so I had a new lease made in my name only.
If that isn't abandonment, please tell me what it is. Do I have to let him take whatever he wants because he was previously a tenant?
It sounds like the one who leaves has all rights, and the one left has none.
*Sigh.*
I understand your anger, bitterness, etc.
You are on a legal site. *Legally* you have not yet been abandoned. You still haven't revealed what state this is, so no one can give you specifics. I know that *legally* in my state (NY), for the purposes of divorce, you need a year before you have grounds of abandonment.
What OG is saying, without sugar coating, is that *legally*, until one of you files for divorce, and some form of court orders are established, you are still seen in the eyes of the law as *married*, and he has rights to the marital home.
Reading between the lines, the *advice* is, if hubby wants to play bachelor but hasn't filed for divorce, then you go and file for divorce.
I would advise you to go with "no fault", as "fault" has to be proven if contested, and gets more expensive. Much more expensive. That is just my personal observation, having been through a contested divorce before NY allowed "no fault". (And we'd lived apart for years, the other party had established residency in another state, so abandonment could have been used as a legal reason, but the other side wouldn't agree, so it went to trial.)
I would advise you to look hard at what you've got and decide what you can live without and what you can part with. Remember: everything you purchased together is a reminder of him. Part of divorcing is letting go of that life together.
If your husband wants *everything*, then yes, he's being unreasonable. Until you have a court order excluding him from the marital home, I suggest you spend some time documenting/cataloging items. 1) In dividing assets, this will help to determine the $ amount of what is being divided. You may well be required to enumerate these things anyhow. 2) If things walk with him that shouldn't - the dishes you inherited from your grandmother, for example, having documentation that they exist (and a reason why they shouldn't be considered marital property) will help in trying to get them back. Or a $ worth of loss, if he no longer has them in his possession.