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Mother, if you mean wife of the deceased husband.
There will be different requirements depending on the state you live in. In California, the next of kin can affect a change of title on a car owned by a person deceased.
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Yes, children have priority over the mother of the deceased. They are the descendants it get priorty second only to a surviving spouse. Even without a will the spouse will come first, then children. Parents are next, then siblings.
The next of kin of a deceased person aged 62 when their mother is 92 would typically be their own children, if they have any. If the deceased has no children or if they have predeceased them, then it would likely be their siblings, nieces or nephews, or other close relatives. Ultimately, the designation of next of kin can vary depending on the specific circumstances and legal regulations in the jurisdiction.
The mother AND the father are a child's next of kin. Next of kin is determined by legal adoption, marriage and blood. If a child's parents are deceased their next-of-kin would be their siblings by blood or by legal adoption.
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next of kin would be eldest child
Generally, if both parents are deceased the siblings or issue of any deceased siblings would be next of kin. If there are no siblings or issue of siblings the next of kin would be collateral kindred and that can get more complicated. There are charts that show how to determine collateral kin and the state laws of intestacy control who inherits in an intestate estate. You can see more at the links provided below.
Fitness depends on the individual, not a relationship. Next of kin, however, is usually a common way of saying "closest surviving relative" If the deceased was married, the surviving spouse is the closest relative. After the spouse usually come children, then siblings, then parents, then cousins.
I don't know the law in the US but I am sure that the mother of a deceased person could NEVER sell the property of his spouse (widow?) or even the deceased's property as the spouse (widow) would be next of kin and even if there was not a will the law has rules about this kind of thing Lock the woman out.
My father had an affair, and my mother found out, and no matter what an argument was about, my mother threw the affair in his face, every time, for the next 50 years. So the answer is ALWAYS and ANYTHING.