No.
There are four divisions of the Court of Common Pleas in Hamilton County, Ohio - General Division, Domestic Relations, Juvenile, and Probate. The Domestic Relations and Juvenile divisions are located at the same courthouse. For specific information on the contact information for each court and resources for each court, see the related link.
In the Uk the current Court fee for those attending court in person is £105.00 (August 2012) plus £1 for each additional copy of probate requested at the same time as the application.
Any executor must be appointed by the probate court. If joint executors are named in the Will they must petition to be appointed by the court. They can only be removed by the same court.
Any executor must be appointed by the probate court. If joint executors are named in the Will they must petition to be appointed by the court. They can only be removed by the same court.
There are several local services that you can find at this list of Probate Registries: http://www.hmcourts-service.gov.uk/HMCSCourtFinder/CourtFinder.do?court_work_type_desc=probate or you could try searching the National Will Database: http://www.tnwdb.com but I think that's a commercial venture.
Family and drug court cases in Santa Clara County are heard at different courthouses (except for juvenile dependency cases, which are at the same courthouse as drug court - see below). Family cases are heard at Family Courthouse, 170 Park Ave, San Jose CA 95113 (City View Plaza, corner of Park & Almaden). Family cases are also heard at South County Courthouse, 301 Diana Avenue, Morgan Hill CA 95037; and at Sunnyvale Courthouse, 605 West El Camino Real, Sunnyvale CA 94087. Drug Court is at Terraine Courthouse, 15 Terraine Street, San Jose CA 95110. That courthouses is also the location for juvenile dependency cases - so if your "family" case is about juvenile dependency, then they are in the same courthouse. Complete contact information and links to the court websites can be found at the related link below, CourtReference Guide to California Courts, which has court contact information like this for every state.
Generally, in order to be appointed the Executor of an estate you must present the Will to the Probate Court for allowance and at the same time petition to be appointed the Executor.
No it is not the same thing at all.
Any executor must be appointed by the probate court. If joint executors are named in the Will they must petition to be appointed by the court. They can only be removed by the same court.
Any executor must be appointed by the probate court. If joint executors are named in the Will they must petition to be appointed by the court. They can only be removed by the same court.
A "letter of administration" is a document issued by the probate court to the person who is to administer an estate where there is no will. It proves that that person is officially the one to deal with concerning the estate. "Letters testamentary" is the name of the same type of document that is issued to an executor where there is a will.
go to your county courthouse to the circuit court and ask for an application, turn it back in at the same place.