They can certainly claim a portion of the estate. They are entitled to it as much as any other descendants. And in most cases if there is no will, there is a portion of the estate that they get.
Probably Spouse first, then his Estate then the children.
It depends on the country you are in, but in the UK, the first claim on the estate is the revenue (ie tax), then debtors - which would include the credit card debt. That should be paid out of the estate of the deceased.
If the credit card company has filed a claim against the estate the debt must be paid before any assets can be distributed to the heirs. In any estate the debts must be paid first. The heirs get any assets that are left after the payment of debts. If the estate doesn't pay the bill the creditor can force the sale of the real estate to collect the debt. If the property is the only asset and the heirs want to keep it then the heirs must pay the credit card bill.
The debts of the estate have to be resolved first. Only then can funds be distributed.
The estate pays all debts first and then distributes the assets. So yes they can.
No
A current spouse would have first claim.
She had four children in the first six years of her marriage. She had four children in the first six years of her marriage. She had four children in the first six years of her marriage.
No. A civil annulment provides that there was no valid marriage in the first place and the parties are free as if they were never married. Therefore, they have no legal claim to the other's estate.An ecclesiastical annulment in itself does not dissolve a marriage. It must be followed by a civil divorce.No. A civil annulment provides that there was no valid marriage in the first place and the parties are free as if they were never married. Therefore, they have no legal claim to the other's estate.An ecclesiastical annulment in itself does not dissolve a marriage. It must be followed by a civil divorce.No. A civil annulment provides that there was no valid marriage in the first place and the parties are free as if they were never married. Therefore, they have no legal claim to the other's estate.An ecclesiastical annulment in itself does not dissolve a marriage. It must be followed by a civil divorce.No. A civil annulment provides that there was no valid marriage in the first place and the parties are free as if they were never married. Therefore, they have no legal claim to the other's estate.An ecclesiastical annulment in itself does not dissolve a marriage. It must be followed by a civil divorce.
They become part of his estate. The executor of his estate would file the claim against the first estate.
children: five (first marriage, two; second marriage, three).
John Hagee has 5 children; two from his first marriage, and three from his second marriage.
Flair's first two children came from his first marriage, his second marriage also produced two children.
Only if he is the closest living relative, i.e. there are no first cousins, no children, now surviving spouse, no parents or aunts/uncles.
No.
Yes
yes he has two children, one from his first marriage and one from his second marriage to yoko