No, if she was the named beneficiary the benefits belongs to her, and she has no legal responsibility for the deceased's children.
No, an ex-spouse can't collect a deceased husbands insurance if the first wife is listed as beneficiary even if the fist wife is now deceased. The money will go to the beneficiary's heirs.
I am an ex/wife of a man who I was married to for 12 years, his second wife has died. Can I collect on his social security when he passes away? Answer: Yes
I am an ex/wife of a man who I was married to for 12 years, his second wife has died. Can I collect on his social security when he passes away? Answer: Yes
An ex-wife has no claim nor rights in her ex-husband's estate.An ex-wife has no claim nor rights in her ex-husband's estate.An ex-wife has no claim nor rights in her ex-husband's estate.An ex-wife has no claim nor rights in her ex-husband's estate.
No, the Social Security benefit received by a divorced spouse is based on their ex-spouse's earnings record, while a widowed spouse receives benefits based on their deceased spouse's earnings record. The specific amount will vary depending on individual circumstances and eligibility criteria.
Both can collect social security benefits upon retirement under your benefit if your first wife was married to you for over ten years.
As soon as the husband begins collecting it, but the ex wife can only collect it if there is a standing court order pertaining to to.
Not if you lived in America
The beneficiaries on your life insurance policy will receive the life insurance benefits. Please make sure your policy is updated with the correct beneficiaries. Many people forget to update their life insurance policy after divorce, or any other major life event and unfortunately the ex-husband or ex-wife receives the benefits. If all the beneficiaries named on the policy are deceased, then the benefit will go to the insured's estate (which may or may not go to the deceased children. The only way to ensure that the benefits are going to the intended person(s), is to update your insurance policy's beneficiaries.
The circumstances can vary greatly here. It will depend on what the conditions of alimony are, for one. If the ex-husband isn't required to keep the ex-wife as a beneficiary on a life insurance policy, and decides to remove the ex-wife, then the ex-wife will receive nothing.
The correct term is "ex-wife," with a hyphen.