Yes the beneficiary on file gets the payment
Of course not.
In many places, depending on the lease, the landlord can insist on the minimum amount of insurance the tenant has.
Most customer reviews dictate that Kwik home insurance is an average insurance company with most of the complaints centered around their customer service.
In the United States, the insurance system is governed at the state level. A wide variety of licensing and regulating companies dictate the business of insurance, and varies from state to state.
They can't tell you who to hire, but they can decline or reject a contractors bid.
The answer will depend upon the laws of the state that has jurisdiction over the probate, and the manner in which the insurance/annuities were titled: 1. The probate law of the state will generally dictate how the executor may be paid in the absence of a provision in the Will addressing that. The court will rely upon what it determines as "reasonable", taking into account the size of the estate, the complexity of the issues involved, and other factors. 2. If the insurance/annuities were payable to the estate as beneficiary, and therefore became part of the estate, a stronger argument would exist to allow the executor a fee for their collection. In contrast, if they were payable directly to a named beneficiary, the executor would not have much involvement in their collection and it would be hard to justify a fee.
You are able to chose your own deductible, but you have the car financed or leased, they may dictate the maximum limit.
Flag Day is not officially a national holiday. Each state is free to dictate the status of this holiday. Thus, holiday insurance is not affected by Flag Day.
regulatory policy targets the behavior of individuals or industry. Example: Laws that dictate that you may not jaywalk or that you must have an insurance card
The future tense of "dictate" is "will dictate."
It should, they do offer a discount for having an alarm. They cannot dictate the times that it should be on.
The word dictate is a verb. Mrs. Jones will dictate a letter now.