As an heir you have the right to petition to be appointed the executor of the estate if there is a will and no other executor is named, or the administrator of the estate if there is no will. The estate must be probated in order for title to the property to pass to the heirs. You should consult with an attorney who specializes in probate law in your state.
A Power of Attorney is extinguished by the death of the principal. Your cousin has no authority over the estate.
State sovereignty may be an obstacle to human rights when such rights are enacted at a supra-national level and implementation or defense of these rights requires sovereign states to enforce them. This creates a principal agent problem, where the interests of the state and the supra-national agency (e.g.) the United Nations) diverge, and the state disregards the agency because it profits off that choice. However, state sovereignty may support human rights when human rights are enacted and enforced by the state itself (which occurs frequently in advanced, Western democracies).
Tricky question! Was the official acting as an agent of the state and in an official capacity when your rights were violated. If so, you probably can sue both. If it official was NOT acting as an agent for the state in an official capacity, then you'll probably only be able to sue the individual. Give a good law firm a call. Usually your first consultation is free and they will be able to answer alot of your questions.
If it was legal in Colorado, it would be in Kansas.
A registered agent is a state-specific thing. A company may have a different registered agent in each state. Check with your Secretary of State to see who the registered agent is for your particular state.
If the Durable POA is valid in the state where it will be used then it should be accepted.
Tennessee
Yvonne Solis. She is a State Farm agent in Los Angelos.
Those would be state's rights .
yes he do believe in state rights
tennessee
The state can not take away your rights that the fed constitution grants to each citizen it has no rights to take away. They belong to you not the state.
In the state of Rhode Island it is legal to marry a first cousin. 20 states allow first cousin marriages.