The account should be presented to the executor of the estate (not just a family member) before payment. That is, unless the deceased paid the bill before dying--then it goes through.
Yes, if a family members uses a credit card without permission they can be punished by law. That is considered to be theft.
No,thats wrong if there family its even worse
In this state a death certificate is a public document, believe it or not. I can walk into the county bureau of vital statistics and purchase any death certificate for anyone as long as I have the cash. It will have the official seal. I do not need permission from anyone. Since I was the executor of a deceased person's estate, I needed orders of administration, which I got from the clerk of the court. I also had to pay for those. I needed those to sell any of the deceased's property. My name was on them as the only person authorized to sell any of the deceased's property. I closed the estate as fast as possible.
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The credit card compaines will hire someone to harass the family to get the money, or they will hire a lawyer and go to court. They don't care.
no
Not without parental permission.
No one. The person left is not responsible for the debt. The credit cards want people to think that the family owes for the deceased debt, but they don't.
The possessive form for the noun the deceased is the deceased's (the deceased's family).
With a tissue or hair follicle, with the permission of his family, however it is far more expensive than a standard paternity test.
They are usually not allowed to. There are confidentiality clauses in most bank loans, and generally, information about your financial status may not be revealed to other family members or journalists or nosy neighbors (or whoever) without your permission. If you sign a waiver, you could give another person, like a spouse, permission to know about the loan; and if the spouse or family member is a co-signer, they would of course know about it. But strangers or people to whom you did not give permission would usually not be given any of your confidential information. However, it should be noted that banks do report to credit bureaus, and if you are delinquent in your payments, that information would become part of your credit history; other agencies could access it to learn more about you when you apply for credit at some future time.
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