Want this question answered?
No. There is no rule that as executor your debts are forgiven. However, if there is no written evidence of the debt and it is not mentioned in the will you can forget about it since your mother made the decision to not memorialize it in writing.
You haven't provided enough detail about who all the "part" owners are, whose names are on the deed to the property and what was expressed "in writing" between your husband and his mother.
Something made from available material on hand would do here.
flowers, cards, jewelery, chocolates and money. Sometimes hugs or kisses
none
well, given that there are no explorers today i would say...they make...NOTHING THEY MAKE ZERO $
Basically nothing, as the mother does not have to account for how the money is spent, or who is living with her at the time.
Thrift is care given in the expenditure of money, or the avoidance of unnecessary spending or purchases.
Money Means Nothing was created in 1932.
It isn't. "Kiting a cheque" is slang for writing a bad cheque when there is no money in your account. A kite is made of paper and has nothing between it and the ground - a bad cheque is paper and has no money behind it - you can see the similarities that made people start using the term "kite" to mean "writing a bad cheque."
Nothing will happen.
Money for Nothing - song - was created in 1984-12.