Not without the permission of the executor. They are responsible for making sure the estate is maintained.
The living trust has a trustee, not an executor. The will is a separate process and you would be the executor.
In the state of Illinois, if a person whose parents are deceased has been named executor of their estate, yes, all of their financial information will be given to the living executor upon request.
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If your grandmother is still living, you can't. If she is deceased, the executor of the will is required to notify you if you are in the will. If there is no will, and your parents are deceased, then you should contact the probate court and/or executor.
You can't be the executor of an estate if the individual is still living. Property transfers are done the same as any other time.
The executor has no power while the person is living. Until they are appointed by the court, they have no power.
No.
No. A Will does not become operative until the testator has died. The executor named in a parent's Will to distribute their estate after their decease has no right to take the parent's property while they are still living.
Yes, that is very common. The spouse is typically the executor of the estate.
A trust doesn't have an executor. It has a trustee. The trustee manages the trust according to the terms of the trust.
You can't be executor of an estate if the individual is still living. However, the executor can make people move out of the house.