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If they were still married at the time of his death and his families estate is already in probate. If not, it will depend on the wording of the bequest.
Not legally. In order to sell real property, someone has to have the authority to do so. Without a letter from the probate court, such a transfer would not be legal.
If there is going to be a probate because there is other property, the son won't have the authority to sell the car. That should be left up to the executor or the administrator of the estate. Generally there are state legal provisions that permit the sale of the automobile in estates too small for a full probate procedure.
Technically the beneficiary doesn't have a legal interest to sell without the courts probate order. There are some organizations that will loan money against an expected estate. And making false claims about ownership is fraud.
Some sort of probate document is going to be required in order to transfer title. If the car is the only thing in the estate, some jurisdictions have a simple form that can be filled out and submitted to get the courts permission to sell it.
Your father's estate owns it, until distributed by the executor. Your aunt does not have title to the motorcycle unless she has a Letter of Authority from the probate court.
You may have to have a probate court rule on ownership before you can legally sell or give away the property.
No. The Power of Attorney expired on the death of the grantor. Real property cannot be transferred without a letter of authority from the probate court.
noah didnt really sell his fathers boat he was going to because he neede lice to help him get his father out of jail
NO. A power of attorney expires upon the death of the principal. You need to submit the will to probate to have the estate probated. Real property cannot pass to the heir legally until the estate is probated. Therefore, you cannot sell the property because you don't own it until the will is probated.
You haven't provided enough details.Have the heirs requested that the executor sell.Was the executor instructed to sell in the will.Was a license to sell issued by the probate court.Is the estate settled.If the executor was ordered to sell and hasn't made arrangements to market the property then you should complain to the probate court to compel them to carry out their duty or ask they be replaced. If the probate process is completed and the executor was under no obligation to sell the property, title has vested in the heirs and they can sell the property.
The estate has to sell the house for a fair market price. They cannot sell it at a discount.