yes once your a blood related you can register a death
Legal heirs like son, daughter or wife.The "original" certificate is the entry in the register. The person registering the death can obtain certified copieswhich are accepted for all legal requirements.
AnswerYes I believe you do.No, you just need to fill out a form with your name and address and also the name and date of death for the person you need the certificate. The charge is more if it is certified and less for just a copy.
The medical death certificate (issued by a doctor) is free of cost. This must then used to register the death within 5 days at a registrars office. The medical certificate will be taken off you and kept by the office and the office will issue the person registering the death with the documents you need for the funeral. These include one free copy of the Death Certificate. Duplicate Certificates can be purchased (at a discount) at this time, if you order them later they will cost £9.25 (+postage) each.
You cannot receive your death certificate. But you can get a death certificate of someone who is related to you.
Requirements for applying for death certificates are different for each state. They require you to be the spouse, parent, sibling or child of the deceased. Some states however will issue a death certificate to anyone with a lawful right or court order.
yes you can register a car with such title anywhere in the us.
The executor has to have a copy to execute the will. It will be part of the petition to the probate court. And the certificate is a public record and anyone can obtain a copy.
Certificate Authority (CA)
No, a death certificate is a public certification that someone has died. Some information on a death certificate may be kept private.
It states that the person specified in the death certificate is dead and the certificate is an official document.
Depends on when the death occurred. If the death is relatively recent, then there will be a death certificate. You go to the gov and look up ordering a death certificate. Not just anyone can order the certificate, you have to have a legitimate reason (normally you need to be related). Most gov agencies are online. Look up your location and Vital Statistics, and it will be there. If you are looking at a death that occurred abt 100 years ago, death certificates were not common and not issued as a rule. Just a simple entry in a book was all most gov'ts required.
Nothing but a birth certificate and a passport