IS POLICY NUMBER # 305501 STILL COLLECTABLE WM J ALFREY E MAIL williamalfrey@Verizon.net
There are several sites that offer auto insurance information and reviews. Consumer Reports has information regarding each insurance agency including Assurance.
No it is not. The beneficiary information is listed on the policy and with the home office of the insurance company, but there is no reporting of it elsewhere.
You can typically find out who the beneficiary is on a life insurance policy by checking the policy documents or contacting the insurance company directly. The beneficiary information is usually listed on the policy itself, in the beneficiary designation form, or in the insurer's records.
In general, no. You only need a beneficiary for life insurance.
You can find information on Prudential Life Assurance online at the Prudential website. Once on the page, click on "Products and Services" and then "Life Insurance" to bring up the information.
Yes, you can have a secondary beneficiary on your life insurance policy. If the primary beneficiary is no longer living when you pass away, the secondary beneficiary would receive the proceeds from your life insurance policy.
Life insurance is usually governed by beneficiary information on the policy. In other words, whoever the beneficiary is on the policy will the one to collect. You may want to consult a local lawyer to confirm this.
beneficiary
No, the spouse is not. The beneficiary is named. There are laws that require the spouse to sign an acknowledgement that there is life insurance that she is not the beneficiary of.
The Insured can change the beneficiary on a life insurance contract.
The owner of a life insurance policy has the right to choose the beneficiary. Another person has no power to change that choice.
When referring to life insurance, a beneficiary is a person specified by the contract holder. This beneficiary will receive the benefits if the primary beneficiary has died at the time the benefit is to be paid.