Yes
If you are a first named insured on your policy then your liability coverage would extend to any non-owned private passenger vehicle you have permission to operate.
Normally an insured person on a life insurance policy lists another person as his beneficiary. If that person dies first, then when the insured person dies, it goes to his estate. In that case, the term estate does not refer to a piece of land. Estate refers to all of his property: Bank accounts, Insurance policies, unused IRAs, etc. Some of them may be designated and others not. Whatever he owned when he died is his estate as far as the law is concerned.
NO!!
That all depends on the insurance carrier. There are many non-standard carriers that will insure a vehicle even if it's not the owned by the named insured. Ask your insurer if they offer this service.
Only those persons that have owned the house for those years can tell you who they insured it with during that time.
You are covered if you are a licensed driver regardless what they say. A leased vehicle is owned by the leasing agency not by the person who is leasing it. The terms of the contract will designate who may or may not drive the vehicle and nothing else applies.
Slaves do not have fun. They are slaves and are people owned by another person.
Slaves don't make money. They are people who are owned by another person and are property. The person who owned them looked at them the same way you do your dog or cat.
If the policy is "owned" by the person whose life is insured, almost anybody can be named as a beneficiary; though once a person is named, changing the name will depend on other factors. If the policy is owned by somebody else who wants to name his-or herself, the person must usually show an "insurable interest." In other words, there has to be a good reason why money should be paid out on the person's death -- that there is some monetary consequence to the proposed beneficiary by the person dying. This, for example, could include partners in a business, or key employees in a business. This type of naming would require consent of the insured.
Trading in policies.
Slaves do not have fun. They are slaves and are people owned by another person.
People who are slaves have no freedom. They are owned by another person and are considered property.