No. Not unless they file for an appointment of an agent with the court. However, they must have a good reason such as when the appointed executor resides at some distance from the court or in another state. The agent is usually an attorney.
Generally, an executor is expected to perform their duties personally and they are responsible for ever action they take as executor. See related link.
No. Not unless they file for an appointment of an agent with the court. However, they must have a good reason such as when the appointed executor resides at some distance from the court or in another state. The agent is usually an attorney.
Generally, an executor is expected to perform their duties personally and they are responsible for ever action they take as executor. See related link.
No. Not unless they file for an appointment of an agent with the court. However, they must have a good reason such as when the appointed executor resides at some distance from the court or in another state. The agent is usually an attorney.
Generally, an executor is expected to perform their duties personally and they are responsible for ever action they take as executor. See related link.
No. Not unless they file for an appointment of an agent with the court. However, they must have a good reason such as when the appointed executor resides at some distance from the court or in another state. The agent is usually an attorney.
Generally, an executor is expected to perform their duties personally and they are responsible for ever action they take as executor. See related link.
Yes. The court must be notified and will appoint a successor.
Yes. The court must be notified and will appoint a successor.
Yes. The court must be notified and will appoint a successor.
Yes. The court must be notified and will appoint a successor.
An executor must be appointed by the court. If the testator has died, you are the named executor and you don't want to serve then you will need to file a "Declination" when the will is filed for probate. The court will appoint someone else as executor.
No. Executors must be appointed by the probate court. Executors have no power or authority until they have been appointed by a court. If the court appointed executor cannot complete their duties they must resign and the court must appoint the successor.
No. Not unless they file for an appointment of an agent with the court. However, they must have a good reason such as when the appointed executor resides at some distance from the court or in another state. The agent is usually an attorney.
Generally, an executor is expected to perform their duties personally and they are responsible for ever action they take as executor. See related link.
Once the executor has been appointed by the court they can appoint an agent by filing a notice with the court. This is usually done when the executor lives at some distance from the court.
Yes. An executor can resign by a writing filed with the court and a new executor can be appointed.
Yes. The court must be notified and will appoint a successor.
yes
There is no executor of probate. The executor of the estate executes the will and probates the estate.
What is the executor of the estate for the titanic?
Return to the court that appointed the executor and petition to have the executor removed and a new one appointed.
They do have that ability to have them removed. The property belongs to the estate and the executor is responsible for it. They can rent or sell the property.
Yes, she can petition the court to be the sole executor. If there is conflict, the court may very well appoint a third party, a bank or attorney, without a vested interest in the estate. This typically costs the estate money in the form of compensation to the executor.
what if the estate executor fee in arkansas
No, the executor works for the estate. The estate will pay the executor a reasonable fee. The beneficiary has limited direction that they can give the executor.
They become part of his estate. The executor of his estate would file the claim against the first estate.
Another interested party can petition the court to have the executor removed (state the reason and provide any evidence) and the court will appoint a successor.
No, the beneficiaries receive the estate. An executor could be a beneficiary
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