Yes. The testator should modify their will or draft a new one. If a new will is drafted the old one should be destroyed along with any copies.
That will depend on the will of the person in question. If they don't have a will, it will depend on the intestacy laws for the appropriate jurisdiction.
It passes to the decedent's heirs, the spouse of which will be one.
They need to get their own lawyer, one who specializes in tax evasion.
No. Debts of one person are never inherited by heirs or beneficiaries under a will
Certainly. The heir's portion will become part of their estate and distributed accordingly.
No only those that the current owner wishes to have a house key should have them. Any other heirs can get one after the will is settled.
If the parties owned the land as joint tenants with the right of survivorship or as tenants by the entirety full ownership passes to the survivor when one dies. If the parties owned as tenants in common and one dies- their interest passes to their heirs at law.
That natural heirs would be the first choice. The laws vary depending on the specific jurisdiction. The spouse is the first one on the list. Children would be the next one.
It depends on the specific legal arrangements put in place for the ownership of the home. Typically, if one of the siblings dies, their share of the property would be passed on to their heirs or beneficiaries as outlined in their will or through intestate succession laws if there is no will.
No. If one TBE dies their interest automatically passes to the surviving TBE. The survivor becomes the sole owner and that survivor can leave the property to someone by their Will.
Beowulf is said to have one known heir named Wiglaf. After Beowulf dies, Wiglaf takes over as king of the Geats.
Two people who are not married must be very careful about how the property is titled in the deed. If they want the property to automatically pass to the other if one dies then the property should be taken as joint tenants with right of survivorship. If Robert and Erin owned as JTWRS and Robert died then Erin would be the sole owner. That scheme of ownership could not be changed by a will. If they do not want the other to become the sole owner if one dies then they should take the property as tenants in common. If Robert and Erin were tenants in common and Robert died then Robert's heirs at law would inherit his half or he could leave it to someone in his will. You need to decide what should happen to the property if one should die and then have that reflected in the deed.