Yes, a person who has been charged with a felony but not convicted of the crime can be the executor of an estate depending where that person is in the legal process. A person who has been charged with a felony is considered innocent until proven guilty.
If you have not been convicted, you are NOT a felon.
In Texas, if the executor of a will is convicted of a felony, they may be disqualified from serving as executor. The court may remove them and appoint a new executor to administer the estate. The specific impact will depend on the circumstances of the case and the terms of the will.
if there are no other cases, then NO
In most states, any person over the age of 18 who hasn’t been convicted of a felony can be named the executor of a will.
If you were charged and convicted of a Misdemeanor offense, yes. If you were charged and convicted of a Felony, no.
If he is only charged with a felony it won't follow him. If he is convicted on a felony it will stay on his record unless he has it expunged.
In Texas, if the executor of a will is incarcerated for a felony, they may be disqualified from serving as executor. It will be up to the court to determine if a new executor should be appointed to handle the estate administration.
An executor is the e person who is responsible for settling the details of a deceased person's estate. There can be a single executor or one or more people charged with this job. An executor can be related to the deceased person, can be a friend or a lawyer, accountant, or other professional. The main requirement is that the person chosen as executor be at least 18 years old and have not been convicted of a felony. If you have been named the executor of someone's estate, you have been given a job of great responsibility. Some of these responsibilities include: paying creditors and taxes on the estate, notifying social security and other agencies of the deceased death, canceling credit cards among other things, and distributing the assets left in the estate.The executor of an estate has tremendous responsibility from small tasks to large ones. the executor of the deceased's estate must make sure all of the deceased's taxes and debts are paid, and then distribute what is left to the appropriate beneficiaries. The executor has a "fiduciary duty" to act in a manner of good faith and impartiality in making sure the wishes of the deceased are carried out to whatever extent possible
Yes, the felony conviction only bars the convicted felon from possessing one.
NOT if you were charged and convicted of a FELONY.
There is no statute of limitations on a felony drug conviction. You were charged and convicted. It is a part of your record forever.
Convictions- or a charge pending trial- is a disqualifier. Charged, but charge dropped or found not guilty- NOT a disqualifier.