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A private telephone line can be signed up for by contacting your telephone service provider. It will cost more money then what is paid for a public line.
The company seems to have gone (or been put) out of business according to the website of the Texas Department of Insurance, and lost its Certificate of Authority to transact business in Texas. Additionally, it seems to have no assets. Nonetheless, you may want to contact the Division of Liquidation and Rehabilitation (check proper name) at the Texas Department of Insurance.
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With a registered letter - you should have been given a receipt from the post office when you paid for the registered service. That receipt has a unique number. The post office - when they delivered the letter, will have a signature of the person who accepted it from the postal worker, matched against their delivery register. If the post office confirm they delivered it (and provide you with proof) - you simply contact the place you sent the letter to - and inform them you can prove they received it !
don lafontaine
A public adjuster works for the policyholder, not the insurance company. Since a public adjuster only gets paid if you get paid, I would consult as early as possible in the claim process. You than can make an educated decision as to whether their services would be beneficial to you.
a claim that has all the information to have the claim paid.
That is what the estate funds are for. If the claim is legitimate, it needs to be paid.
You proabably can't apply for benefits without a doctor. Your claims form needs to be completed by a certified medical professional in order to be paid a claim.
You wouldn't need it. Once the claim has been paid, the policy would no longer exist. If you are the beneficiary you would be entitled to the money but you wouldn't need the policy paperwork anymore since it technically wouldn't exist.
A proof of claim is filed by a creditor of the decedent. That claim must be paid before any assets are distributed to the heirs. A Proof of Claim is a form that a creditor submits to the court to get paid.
Yes do I file a claim on line or how?
Probably not. Just as you can't claim ownership of property to which you have no title.
NO
No.
Yes, you are supposed to claim any money received to the IRS. Even if you get paid cash, the IRS wants their money.
My "rights" are whatever the agreement was between my brother and I when I paid the money. If there is no written agreement, depending on your state law, you may not have any right. You may claim it was a loan. He may claim it was a gift. If it was a loan, the amount may exceed what can be loaned without a written agreement and you are out of luck. You should have asked this question of a local lawyer before the money was paid out.