There should be a relevant and authentic certificate to prove. In the majority good awarding bodies use a special water marked paper to print award certification on.
I will have to have a lot more information than this to know why a homeowner's policy would possibly cover money owed to someone else. This sounds like an issue for court not for a homeowner's claim.
No. No income not belonging to an obligated borrower may be considered.
You cannot find out anything to do with another person's tax return due to the privacy laws. If you file your own tax return and claim yourself and then another person also claims you as a dependent on their return both persons will receive a letter from the IRS requiring you to prove you had a right to do so. The IRS will determine who had the right to claim you and the other person will have to repay the taxes plus penalties and interest. If you think someone may have claimed you without a right to do so I would recommend that you contact the IRS and report this to them even if you are not required to file for the year in question. If would help if you have the other persons name and social security number but it is not required. The phone number for the IRS is 1-800-829-1040.
1. To legally charge (someone) with an offense or crime. 2. To claim that (someone) has done something wrong.
No and how can someone trick you into marrying them
Same rules apply as if it was your own car. Make sure you get the insurance information from the person that was at fault and immediately call that insurance company and file your claim. The owner of the car will probably have to verify that you had permission to drive the car. If the other persons insurance denies the claim then the owner of the car will have to make a claim under their policy.
In the US, at least, the answer is yes. You can sue just about anybody for just about anything.A good resource for you would be your own insurance agent. Ask him/her about how to get an insurance company to respond to the claim.
When the person acquired their license bond they signed an indemnity agreement. That indemnity agreement states that if there is a claim paid out on the bond the person or persons who signed the indemnity are responsible to repay to the surety all costs associated with said claim. Once there has been a loss on the persons license bond it will be very difficult if not impossible for that individual to get another bond until the claim has been repaid.
Anytime you make a claim with your own insurance company against someone else's company or their company directly, the company taking the claim by law has to fully verify and investigate the claim being made. Not only that, no insurance company in their right mind would pay out insurance claims without checking them out first.
Yes, you can meet someone at baggage claim.
Only if the other persons insurance covers anybody who drives the car.
Debtors MAY have a legitimate claim against the deceased persons. However they must file their claim against the ESTATE(s) of the deceased persons, not against any particular individual. Unless someone who is still alive co-signed a note or a loan, the creditors have no other claim on anyone, or anything, except the estate that the deceased left behind.