Seek legal counsel.
That depends on how you and your spouse held title to your property and whether the surviving children are the children of both the decedent and the surviving spouse. You should consult with an attorney.
You haven't mentioned who the other next of kin are. Generally, if there is a surviving wife, you have no right to any input. If there is no surviving wife but there are surviving children, they are next in line, then parents if there are no children. See related question link.You haven't mentioned who the other next of kin are. Generally, if there is a surviving wife, you have no right to any input. If there is no surviving wife but there are surviving children, they are next in line, then parents if there are no children. See related question link.You haven't mentioned who the other next of kin are. Generally, if there is a surviving wife, you have no right to any input. If there is no surviving wife but there are surviving children, they are next in line, then parents if there are no children. See related question link.You haven't mentioned who the other next of kin are. Generally, if there is a surviving wife, you have no right to any input. If there is no surviving wife but there are surviving children, they are next in line, then parents if there are no children. See related question link.
No. Lawful "issue" are descendants including those more remote than children. A wife is a surviving spouse under the laws of intestacy. Both the surviving spouse and issue are legal next-of-kin.
In Egyptian mythology, Thoth is not typically depicted as having children in the traditional sense. He is primarily known as a god of wisdom, writing, and magic, and is often associated with knowledge and communication.
The State
Elizabeth.
Yes.
David R. Olson has written: 'Language acquisition and cognitive development' -- subject(s): Children, Cognition in children, Language, Language acquisition, Psycholinguistics 'The world on paper' -- subject(s): Cognition, Written communication 'Children's understanding of text, interpretation and knowledge' -- subject(s): Cognition in children, Literacy, Reading comprehension 'Teacher-student communication games' -- subject(s): Communication in education, Interaction analysis in education, Teacher-student relationships 'Oral language competence and the development of literacy' -- subject(s): Children, Language, Oral communication, Reading
You can check your state laws of intestacy at the link provided below. Choose your state then click on "Read the text". Generally in Colorado the distribution of an intestate estate with a surviving spouse and children depends on whether the surviving children are also the children of the surviving spouse.
the surviving spouse receives an equal portion as each child.
The wife and kids.
The surviving children will inherit.