All you do is call a dealer that sell that make. If not leased by the manufactuer call the leasing company for instructions
Sure! If you have a driver's license and your spouse doesn't mind.
You will have to make the payments to the company that purchases their assets, it doesn't mean you get a free car.
Legally no, The insurance company does not have a rating for you on the car and you dont have an insurable interest (legal term for financial responsibility) in the car. Therefore the lease holder would be obligated to take the car back to prevent a financial loss in the event of an accident.
Yes. If the car is leased then you do not own it, it belongs to someone else (the leasing company), and you have no right to their property.
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.
You do not have to be a driver to buy a car. You only need money. The car dealers will be happy to sell you one. (You will, however, need to have a driver with you to drive the car off the lot.)
It depends on a couple things. Does the spouse have a valid drivers license? Does the spouse live in the same house? Does the spouse live in another country? These questions can help determine if your spouse needs to be added. Some insurance companies will not cover your car if it is in an accident and was being driven by your spouse, if that person was not listed as a driver. Insurance companies charge a premium based on the amount of risk. Everything is risk; the area you live, the car you drive, your age, your sex, how many miles per year you drive, etc. If another driver lives in your house and has access to your keys, the insurance company will want to rate for that person (charge more money). The alternative is not telling your insurance company and waiting until after an accident to find out you broke the contract (all policies are contracts), and that they will not pay to fix your car or represent you in legal trials. Is it worth it to save a few dollars and try to cheat the insurance company if it means you won't have car insurance when you actually need it?
You can only use a company car for that company's business.
No, because it isn't your car.
A private car is normally one owned by an individual or family. Business or commercial are owned or leased by companies for business purposes and are retained under the company name
If the car was leased to the (now deceased) person... It should be returned to the leasing company. The lease agreement is now null and void - if you simply keep the car and try to pay the leasing company - technically you're guilty of theft !