Yes, as long as there is some written proof of the loan such as a promissory note and the statute of limitations hasn't passed.
No, you can't. First, you can't sue a parent for child support. Second, there is nobody to collect it from since your father has passed. However, if your father has an estate you could contact the attorney handling the estate or a private attorney to determine if you have any rights in his estate as an heir at law.
No, not unless you have a written contract that provides you will get paid from the estate.
As he gave it to you before he passed away, it should not be permitted as being part of his estate. Check with the local laws concerning this.
If the estate was duly probated and is now closed then the creditor is out of luck. When an estate is probated a notice is published and the creditors have a certain time period during which to file a claim with the probate court. That time period varies from state to state. If that time period has passed the creditor cannot collect.
Yes, you have to file income taxes for someone who has passed away. This is normally handled by the estate. There is also estate income taxes that must be files as well.
You cannot put a lien on the estate of someone unless they owed you money. In this case, the deceased did not owe you any money.
The court does not automatically appoint a power of attorney. Someone has to request that. And if you are talking about someone who has passed, domeone has to petition to be the executor of an estate.
The estate does have to file a tax return with the IRS. It is responsible for income tax and estate taxes
Credit it against his share of the estate is one way of doing so. If the estate needs to the assets to liquidate debts, the bill should be sent to him as due.
Yes, a freehold estate can be passed on from generation to generation through inheritance or conveyance. This type of estate provides the highest form of ownership interest in real property, allowing it to be passed down to heirs or sold to others.
Traits passed from not your parents, but possibly a grandparent or someone before or related to them
The estate of the deceased is responsible for outstanding debts. The exact process that will be followed depends on whether the deceased outlined plans for an estate in a will or whether the entire situation has to go through probate.