no
only with receipts
The rate for mileage and for gas are completely different and is dependent upon the company in which you work. Gas is considered an expense and as such receipts for gas should be submitted to your company and you should be reimbursed for the actual amount of gas purchased if they don't pay mileage. Mileage includes everything from gas to wear and tear on your vehicle and the insurance you pay on your car. The current dollar rate per mile in the U.S. is 48 cents. That's also the amount you can claim on your taxes if you're not paid for gas or mileage by the company.
Reimbursed means getting paid for items that were damage. It could be items that were destroyed in a weather situation or if you had insurance on that item.
If the property is in the estate, the estate is responsible for them. You are entitled to be reimbursed if you have paid them for the estate. Submit your claim to the executor.
Reimbursement means paying someone back for something. Like, if you lend money, you will be reimbursed when paid back. But you can also reimbursed for your time or effort, etc, or if someone damaged your property, you can be reimbursed for that.
The likely word is burst (blew up, exploded, popped).The similar verb forms are imbursed/reimbursed (paid) and disbursed (paid, gave out).
The executor should never pay the bills themselves. They should have the estate do it. Yes, with proper receipts, there should be no problem with getting the money back.
i believe he got paid $15 million plus a slice of the gate receipts and a cut of the ppv pie.
If you lost them after taking delivery then you are out of luck, because you had possesion. But if they were lost by the provider and you have a contract, then you should be reimbursed.
Homeowner insurance claims are paid to the policy holder, in a condo and the damages are being reimbursed by the association the deed and title holder gets the refund
If you have already paid the contractor in full and have a receipt of such then you would be reimbursed for the difference in what was already paid to minus what the total amount agreed upon was.
No, the mother is the one that paid for taking care of the kid and is the one that should be reimbursed for it. If the mother has passed, the money is owed to her estate.