The person making the payments can make a claim against the estate. It may result in the non-paying sibling getting a greatly reduced share. It may even force the sale of the property, and the paying sibling can purchase it at Fair Market Value.
There is no such thing as a minimum payment. There is no requirement that anything be left to a sibling.
The younger sibling was invented to worship and make things for the older sibling. The average younger sibling will make food and be very respectful in general to the older sibling. Younger siblings should never be rude or disrespecful to the older sibling, or say no to doing anything that the older sibling has asked of them.
You cannot become emancipated from a sibling because you do not owe them anything. Unless the court had ruled that an older sibling should take care of you, there are no legal obligations.
Yes.. Hotmail is their sibling email service!
Being an older sibling can be really bad. you younger siblings ale=ways get what they want and they will do anything to annoy you. :(
No, a sibling will not be responsible for the debts. The estate is responsible for the debts. If the estate has no assets, the creditors will not get paid. If there are not enough assets to pay the debts, the beneficiaries will not receive anything.
Don't do anything , just give them a certain look that means that I'm going to get you back. And then pretend that you have a big plan ( like when your sibling is around pretend that you are on the phone talking to your friend about the " plan " , and maybe send a text message to your sibling about " the plan " ) Your sibling will just freak out , and get paranoid (:
Biological siblings have at least one biological parent in common. See related question.
when a sibling is jealous of another sibling.
Usually when the older sibling is 10, 11, or 12, depending on the parent and how the older sibling and the younger sibling are like.
There is no requirement for a sibling to be in a will.
It means you need to see an attorney, and tell him exactly what happened - when the death occurred, what you received (if anything) from the estate, what you expected to receive, and what your sibling told you. This needs to be done sooner, not later.