The estate of the deceased is responsible for hospital bills whether it's paid by the life insurance, medical insurance or other. Any remaining assets from the estate of the deceased can be given to the beneficiary... after taxes. * Whether or not the property may be subject to probate procedure or to creditor attachment for debt owed depends upon how the property is titled, the state probate succession laws and perhaps the state's homestead exemption.
Sisters of Charity Hospital - Zagreb - was created in 1894.
St. Francis Hospital of The Sisters Of The Poor Of St. Francis was created in 1865.
General Hospital Night Shift - 2007 Brothers and Sisters 2-10 was released on: USA: 23 September 2008
If you are named beneficiary on the polcicy it is contractually binding. Let them dispute all they want.
You are thinking of Catholic Sisters, not nuns: nuns are women religious that are enclosed in a cloistered monastery. Catholic sisters, such as the Ursulines, Hospital Sisters of Quebec, Hospital Sister of Montreal, Sisters of Charity of Montreal primarily ministered to the educational and health needs of the French but served everyone without discrimination. (extracted from Canada's Religions: An Historical Introduction, ByRobert Choquette
Yes there was a St.Anthony hospital located on 10th & State in Milwaukee, WI. I was born in that hospital and named after one of the "Franciscan Sisters of Little Falls MN" that worked at St.Anthony's hospital. It has since been torn down.
We need the email address of Mother Germana, the Mother General of the Sisters of Charity, Capitanio Hospital in Milan, Italy.
If you are the named beneficiary of your sisters life insurance policy then there is no tax. If her policy however paid into her estate and you inherited the funds, then it would be taxable.
General Hospital
First she is an adult ( as you stated) unless she has a developmental disorder I doubt you have custody. Are you asking can you claim her as a dependent?
I don't believe the sisters were "removed". They, like most religious congregations of women, no longer have the numbers of sisters needed to staff their institutions. The majority of sisters who sponsor large catholic hospitals remain primarily on the board of directors level. If the Sisters of Charity were no longer administrators at St.Vincents before it closed, it's because they chose to step aside.
Probably the Sisters of Charity, also co-founded by Saint Vincent de Paul.