Only if you are the estate lawyer or have been named executor of the estate. No one else should be allowed to have a copy.
After burial
Life is not like television and movies. There is no legal requirement that a will must be read at a specific time, or at any time. Wills have to be recorded with the county clerk in the county where the deceased died. Sometimes copies of wills are simply mailed out to the involved parties.
In other word the Probate Process of a deceased. Upon death the legal documentation and will is read, examined to determine valid or invalid. Then all belongs are appropriately distribution.
As I am not an attorney, nor in the legal profession, this will be a layman's answer, until a professional improves it. The laws governing Probate [the process of settling the just debts of a deceased's estate, and distribution of the remaining assets to legally qualified beneficiaries] are different in each state, and are governed by the Probate laws or statutes of the state in which the deceased had legal residence at the time of death. Generally, when a person dies Intestate [without a legal will], most state laws divide the deceased's assets[after paying all just debts of the deceased] between the legal spouse and the legal children of the deceased. In community property states the spouse already has half of all the assets of the marriage, and is entitled to half of the deceased spouse's half. The remaining half of the deceased's interests, are divided as equally as possible among the qualified children. Again, I remind readers of this answer that I am not an attorney, nor in the legal profession, so it is imperative that you consult an attorney, preferably well experienced and qualified in Probate Law, before making any decisions. ==Additional Information== Click on the link provided below and choose your state. Then click on "Read the Law".
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Im sure I read he isnt, nor does he smoke or drink
A person designated to read the deceased person's will at his/her wake or other such ceremony.
A person designated to read the deceased person's will at his/her wake or other such ceremony.
It became legal after the Civil War for African Americans to be able to read.
Yes, it is legal. I have it and I have read the user agreements, and I saw that it is legal.
See if your public library bought the rights. That would be legal because tax dollars pay the author and publisher.
There are a few different places one can read a legal dictionary. There are many that can either be purchased or read at a local library. Legal advice should only be received from a licensed lawyer, however.