Dose my mother have to pay for my late fathers hospital bill from the auto accident that killed him?
If you do not need the money to live on immediately, invest for yourself and off-springs retirement. If immediate use, payoff as many bills as possible, ex home note, cars, credit cards, medical bills. That way you have a homestead to leave children and least bills to deal with as you get older.
Occasionally people have car wrecks or sudden hospitalizations. Most of them do not have the ability to get the money needed to pay to get the car fixed or to replace the car. Most do not have the money to pay the hospital charges. If enough people put enough money into insurance, then when one wrecks a car or one gets sick, there will be money to pay the bills.
In most cases yes the other person's insurance company is liable for paying loss wages, all medical bills, and other costs. This is providing that the other person has insurance.
That depends on how much your bills run, your ability to pay them and how far the provider wants to go in order to collect the money that you owe to him/her.
If you have medical payments in your insurance. Liability only does not pay medical benefits. And the medical bills have to be the result of an auto accident.
yes and they usually do.
Hospital Indemninty insurance is money that is set aside to cover any costs if a hospital employee messes up during any operations that take place during a hostpital stay.
If you win sufficient money hopefully you would be honourable enough to pay outstanding bills without being ordered to do so.
No, you can get him to change the beneficiary and then the money that is claimed will be yours if it has been changed by your husband to your name.
Teachers get a lot of money at the beginning of the school but all that money goes to bills,insurance,food,etc.
your answer is within the question "Registration" is where you sign in, provide proof of insurance, and pay money.
Life insurance is not considered part of an estate and is not available to pay the decedent's bills and debts. Even if there is no money whatsoever to pay bills, the insurance is not part of the estate. The only exception would be if there were no existing named beneficiaries or if the policy is payable to the estate. But even there, keep in mind that it isn't the "insurance" money that is now available to pay the debts. It is "estate" money, because the proceeds were payable to the estate. The Federal government will include life insurance proceeds as part of the gross estate for federal estate tax purposes, but that does not mean they are actually part of the estate.