Yes. You can check your next-of-kin and heirs-at-law for purposes of inheritance under your state laws of intestacy at the related question link provided below.
The next of kin is usually a child and not a sister. For example, if a mother passes away, the next of kin would be her husband and then her children.
They will try to get the next of kin according to the will. I assume as your his husband that you should be the closest of kin
I think you meant "Next of Kin" which means the nearest survivor to the person who has died. IN a family with a husband wife and two children, if the Husband dies, the wife is Next of Kin. If both parents died, say in a car crash, then the children are next of kin to them. Hope this helps!
The step son has no relationship to the aunt. So technically the niece would be the next of kin.
Mother, if you mean wife of the deceased husband.
Only if the child is his child as well.
A brother is more closely related to you than you grandchild is, so a brother would be the next of kin. Of course, a written will can bequeath parts of an estate to other than the "next of kin."
An estranged wife is still married and has all the legal rights that inure to a spouse. Your legal status is not changed by living apart, only if the marriage is legally dissolved by a divorce. You are legal next of kin to your husband.
Your parents and children are next of kin, when used as a common phrase by the English language.Typically, the term next of kin will apply to close relatives by descent (grandparents, parents, children, grandchildren), or through marriage (husband, wife, stepfather, stepmother).AnswerFor legal purposes your children are your primary next of kin. See related question link below.
"The Next of Kin" was created in 1942.
His next of kin or heirs at law are his spouse and his biological children. You can check the laws of intestate succession for your state at the related question link provided below.
Your parents and children are next of kin, when used as a common phrase by the English language.Typically, the term next of kin will apply to close relatives by descent (grandparents, parents, children, grandchildren), or through marriage (husband, wife, stepfather, stepmother).AnswerFor legal purposes your children are your primary next of kin. See related question link below.