It will be valid in another state as long as it was executed in full compliance with the laws of the state where the will was executed unless the will is in some way against the public policy of the state of probate.
No. No state requires a will to be executed in more than one copy.
There is no requirement that an executor be named in the will for the will to be valid. The court will appoint one.
yes.
Valid. Valid. Valid if there is someone to enforce it like a family member, trust, heir or lawyer. Y-THINK-Y
If YOU, his legal spouse, signed the lease - then he cannot be evicted. If no one ever signed a valid lease, then you can all be evicted.
A deed must be signed by the parties to the deed. If one of them was dead when the deed was created, then they could not have signed the document!
Chances are that the answer is yes. I mean if a lease is valid when it's done orally, and no one has a copy, then if you signed it that's it.
True, HIPAA protects a family that has moved from one state to another state. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act was passed in 1996.
You must have a valid drivers license to rent a car. A suspended license is not a valid one.
If one of the fee owners didn't sign the contract then you don't have a valid contract. In order for the contract to purchase land and build on it to be valid and binding on the parties it must be signed by all of the purchasers and all of the fee owners.
Not a valid one, it's a dismissal/ploy used to not state reason
No one. It wasn't a state yet.