The new owner of the property or the trust holding the property would need to legally evict the person.
If there is a will, then the beneficiary gets the money. If there is no will all the children of the decedent get an equal share of the money.
The executor now controlling the estate has to do the transfer but if they had an executor, there is probably also a will, attorney, and a beneficiary (ies)
It is not the parents but the estate that is responsible for any remaining debts. That will include medical bills. If there is not enough in the estate to cover them, someone will not get paid and the heirs may get nothing.
You can always ask your parents. If they are deceased, the executor of the will can tell you.
It is not the parents, but the estate that is responsible for any remaining debts. That will include medical bills. If there is not enough in the estate to cover them, someone will not get paid.
no
The parents of the deceased father (the childs grandparents) can do a paternity test.
Yes, just one with deceased parents.
Yes, Bill Cosby's parents are deceased.
NO. Your question is a bit confusing. First you state their is no beneficiary but then indicate the parents may be the beneficiary. Normally life insurance proceeds do not go through an heirs probate process. Life insurance goes directly to the designated beneficiary outside of any probate process unless no one has been designated or the designated beneficiaries are themselves deceased. If there is no designated beneficiary at all, the life insurance will default to the estate of the deceased for probate and apportionment to the heirs. If there are 2 equal 50 percent designated beneficiaries and one rejects their 50 percent portion, that 50 percent will be assigned to the estate of the deceased for probate and then be apportioned to the heirs of the deceased. An heir can assign his or her inheritance to another heir if they so choose. If the heirs reject the proceeds of the life insurance disbursed by the estate and then also decline to assign it to another heir, then those proceeds will default to the government.
yes the children with deceased parents get social security benefit's. but only if the parents were workers in the US.
Continue paying the mortgage. Don't mention that your parents are deceased. Unless the mortgagee is an individual, no one will notice a thing.