It would depend on the age of the child.
If the estate has any assets, the estate should pay for the debt before anything is passed on to the heirs. If there are no assets the credit card company will just have to write it off. You are not held responsible unless you co-signed for the card.
No one. The family is not responsible for the debt. Credit cards want people to think they are, but it is volunteer to pay/assume the debt of the person who passed away.
Debts of the spouse are considered to have benefited both of them. He can be held responsible for the debts.
Yes. When an account is jointly held, all parties are equally responsible for the entire amount owed.
I live in California, and my grandmother passed away and I contacted the credit card companies, told them she died, sent a death certificate, and they took care of the debt.
Grandmother is. If she's passed away, then it's the responsibility of her estate as a whole, not the responsibility of any specific person.
Yes mutations can be passed from parent to offspring. If a parent has a certain gene that is mutated then there is a possibility that the child may inherit it.
The "you" who would be responsible for his credit card debt would be the benefactors of his estate. In most states, that automatically goes to the wife. I would check with an attorney before liquidating any assets to pay the debt.
No , that only applies to any debt cosigned for or if you were married to the party that has passed away.
Sex-linked traits have alleles that are passed from parent to child on a sex chromosome.
how many (number of chromosomes are passed from parent to offspring in asexual reproduction
Trait