Maybe if the spouce or relative of the person is willing to sell it to you.
Someone who is related to the person who is dead.
You don't do anything, you're dead. Someone else issues a death certificate and decides what to do with the body. Final bills are paid and the estate, what you owned is given to the person or persons entitled to it. This is done with a will and if there is no will, the state will decide who inherits it.
yes I think so .. it has long been a practice of I.D. thieves before hi tech to get a copy [public record] of a dead persons birth certificate of the right age and use it to aquire other documents to establish I.D.
I believe that, in the United States, a medical doctor must sign a death certificate, as they are the only ones qualified to determine if someone is dead.
In Ohio, at least, the spouse just needs a copy of the death certificate to change the address
its certificate is 18 in the UK
In the UK the bank would need a valid Death Certificate for that.
Generally, in the case of a vehicle that still has a lien against it, you would submit a death certificate to the bank that holds the title. It is then up to the bank's policies whether or not they will allow an assumption and let someone take over the loan. They may ask that the vehicle be surrendered.
Send a certified copy of the coroners investigation or death certificate to the Facebook head office. They will handle it from there.
It is a certificate that proves that a person is dead.
They are usually pronounced dead by a Doctor or health professional. On a death certificate they generally write the time of death and the cause. So they need to make an official declaration that the person is actually dead and note the time.
It states that the person specified in the death certificate is dead and the certificate is an official document.