No. A thirteen year old cannot execute a "legal" document.
If the house becomes legally yours by inheritance then you may do with your own property as you please. Keep it or sell it for whatever price you see fit.
No.
Each state has its own laws of inheritance. Probate courts exist to sort out messes dealing with inheritance. It sounds as if you have one such mess. Probably the woman left some money in your father's will is entitled to some money. Just how much is uncertain. This is not a legal forum.
Generally, no. However, she may be entitled to an inheritance, and if she is a minor, her surviving spouse may hold that inheritance in trust for her.
no unless the inherited it from their fathers. no unless the inherited it from their fathers.
My father is deceased my mother used quitclaim deed to sell property what about the kids do fathers interest pass to kids
Simon Tolkien has written: 'Final Witness' 'The King of Diamonds' 'The inheritance' -- subject(s): Inheritance and succession, Historians, Lost works of art, Large type books, Fathers and sons, Crimes against, Fiction 'The inheritance' -- subject(s): Inheritance and succession, Historians, Lost works of art, Fathers and sons, Crimes against, Fiction
They risked their lives, fortunes and families to sign the document.
True
all answers
Yes, she would be considered a natural heir.
The unalienable rights are mentioned in the Declaration of Independence. These rights include the right to Life, Liberty, and the Pursuit of Happiness. The founding fathers took this idea from John Locke, but changed one of them. Locke's original natural rights were to Life, Liberty, and Property.