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No. Life insurance policies are usally voided in the case of suicide.
Depends on your policy. They are all different and can have exclusions for many different reasons. Check with your agent or it should be written in your policy.
Yes, contact the insurance company claims department.
No
Generally, insurance policies exclude suicide. Check with your insurance company, as they are all different.
This depends upon the timing. If the insurance policy was taken out a year or more before your husband committed suicide, then the normal life insurance provisions would allow a normal claim process, and payment of the death benefit. There is usually a provision that if an insured person commits suicide within a year of taking out the policy, this is a kind of insurance fraud and the claim is not paid (although the premiums that have been paid can be refunded). I would also suggest that you read your policy and see what it actually says.
Most life insurance policies do not pay out for suicide.
Suicide is usually excluded under a life insurance policy. The suicide exclusion usually states that there is no payout of life insurance proceeds if the death is due to suicide within two years of the puchase of the life insurance policy. In some states, like Colorado, the suicide exclusion is one year.
No. No insurance policy covers death in case of suicide.
Suicide and life insurance isn't regulated by state law, it is regulated by the insurance company and outlined in the insurance papers.
James George Davey has written: 'Life insurance offices and suicide' -- subject(s): Insurance, Life, Life Insurance, Suicide 'Life insurance and suicide' -- subject(s): Insurance, Life, Life Insurance, Suicide 'On medical evidence in our law courts' -- subject(s): Jurisprudence, Insanity 'The Ganglionic Nervous System: Its Structure, Functions, and Diseases'
I dont think so. Most insurance policies do not cover death by intentional suicide.