No.
All heirs to an estate must sign for a valid transfer of the property.
If the Heirs are missing there will be a method by which a court can appoint someone to sign for the lost or missing heirs.
In order for something to be willed to someone, it has to be in the estate. Both individuals will have equal rights to the property as tenants in common.
Yes and no. The estate of the deceased is responsible for payment of any debts of the departed, so if you had been willed any form of an asset then it could be liquidated or levied for the repayment of a debt owned to the estate. The only time children or a surviving spouse are liable is if they put themselves up as a guarantor, including co-signing on a car, apartment, credit card, and/or medical care.
Only insofar as the judgment can be levied against the estate of the deceased. Since it can be assumed that the willed property was part of the estate's assets then it can be liened if there are insufficient other funds in the estate's assets to satisfy the judgment.
A personal loan is an asset to the estate. As such it can be willed to someone else if there is proper documentation of the loan.
That vehicle will go to whoever that person willed it to. If no one was willed for it then it will go to the next of kin or whoever is taking over the estate.
There is no requirement that the estate do so. It could be done depending on the will and the number of debts involved.
No.
Only the administrator of the estate, or any person the car was willed to can sell the car.
Charles Kuralt
The executor of the estate assumes all responsibilities associated with the estate. Of course, the payment for the appraisal will come out of estate assets.
If the exact wording is "to my surving children", then all other children who predeceased the testator or out.
No. Property that you receive by a will IS an inheritance. Property received from a relative under the laws of intestacy when there was no will is also an inheritance.