An executor is required to distribute the assets according to the will. "Cheating" someone out of their rightful property, as decreed by the will, is illegal.
she might not rember him or that hes her son it should be ok as long as you keep a eye on him
No, but I am making 2 assumptions. I take it that the sister's executor is the mother's beneficiary. I also assume that the mother survived any survivability period that might have been imposed by the will or statute. That being so, the property has vested in the mother, meaning it has become her property now. The only person who can transfer the deceased mother's property is the mother's executor. The correct procedure is for the sister's executor to make an executor's deed to the mother. Then the mother's executor will make a deed to the son. The fact that the mother died before the sister's executor made the deed to his mother does not deprive the mother of the property. The only way the property would not become the mother's is if the will required her to survive the sister by a certain period of time (as many wills do) and she failed to do so. But what happens then creates another problem which I won't go into here. Lastly, as always in probate matters you must check the laws of the state the probate is in.
The son is not personally liable. The estate, of which the son is most likely going to be executor, is responsible for liquidating all debts. If there are not enough assets, the executor provides the court with how they are dividing them across the debtors. With approval, the estate is then liquidated and closed.
2nd cousin
They should, but they don't have to.
albert steptoe
yes it does
He would be your second cousin.
You are each others cousins.
My Two Dads - 1987 Once a Son 1-7 was released on: USA: 8 November 1987
Yes, Jim Jones is married to Chrissy Lampkin from the tv series ''Love & Hip Hop''.
your second cousin- in law or by her name lol