No, there is no such law. The executor makes the decisions according the the will or the intestacy laws.
The Majority Says was created in 2005.
Social Disorganization is a theory on why the majority of people do not commit crimes. It says that if the people of a society agree on the validity of the rules in a society and those rules are strong and clear, deviance will be at a minimum.
That will depend on what the will says. If there is no will, it will be based on the jurisdiction's intestacy law.
Because laws, rules and regulations differ from state to state and possibly even within states, the safest way to proceed is to contact the probate court that has jurisdiction over the will. They can tell you if someone can be excluded (my guess is that people can't be arbitrarily excluded) and what you can do at this point. It may be possible, depending on what probate court says, to demand a reading or viewing of the will. Probate court is not just for the disposition of property for people who had no will. Probate courts have control of wills as well. If for some reason a will is out of order, it would be probate court that would clarify the matter. Trusts (there are several different kinds) do not go through probate at all.
yes, do what the monarch says.
Roblox does not allow sexual ,family , or on-line dating games. Including the Iron Cafe is a on-line dating game they deleted it alot of times but they put it back up but "IronInforcer" says its only to "HANGOUT".
Yes, every will must go through probate regardless of what it says. That ensures all of the legal requirements are met and taxes paid.
It depends what his will says. If he dies without a will then it depends on the laws of intestacy where you live. In most states it will have to go through probate. It may be sold during probate to pay for outstanding debts or to satisfy taxes.
first of all no one says that in the proud family 2nd of all it is homer simpsons
Quagmire from family guy says giggidy
If safety rules are not followed, they can be.
Probably because party members will not always vote according to how the party leader says they should vote, but rather according to their constituents and what they think would be better. In Congress, majority rules; and in some cases, the majority party leader may have a hand in whether or not specific legislation gets passed.