Not if it's settled outside of court, no.
Hire an attorney and determine what their fees are. your payment arrangements must be made with them.
NOT likely, you have made "arrangements" already.
Lets see...2 days after they got the payment,you were STILL in default.Made arrangements??? Must of been forgotten or not acceptable to the lender. Rights? pay what you owe and go get yo car.
legal counsel and the DFAS
it is legal, until it is paid for 100% and you have a title it belongs to them.
What stage of accounting represents orders that have been received but payment has not been made
A next of kin sibling could object to the court appointment of the estate administrator if there is an estate. If there has been no representative for the estate appointed by the court she could petition to be the one appointed. Only the court appointed estate representative has any legal power to make decisions regarding the decedent. If there is no estate and no Will and no court appointed estate representative then the majority would rule over the burial arrangements.
If you made the payment, yes.
A receipt is a written statement showing that a payment has been made.
Nope.
The definition of a redundancy payment is a payment made by an employer to an employee who has been made redundant or unemployed due to changes on the work front.
That depends on the circumstances. Who called the funeral home to remove the body? Who made the funeral arrangements? Who signed the contract? If someone went to a funeral home and made arrangements for a funeral then they have usually signed a contract making them responsible for payment. Whoever made the arrangements should pay and try to get other family members to share the cost. If there was no money to pay for a funeral then arrangements for a funeral shouldn't have been made. In many jurisdictions the city or the county pays for the burial of indigent decedents.