yea umm if that just happend you should probably take her
If they are mentally competent, yes they can. They simply need to execute the statement to that effect.
If they are mentally competent, yes. Their disability does not disqualify them.
for mentally ill
A person has capacity to contract if he has reached the age of majority ( in California, age 18 ) and is mentally competent. It is not necessary to be declared competent by a court, however.
Depends. There are Very different degrees of PTSD. If a person has been adjudicated as mentally incompetent, they cannot. Most vets with PTSD are very mentally competent.
100% invested or involved in another person, not just mentally of emotionally involved.
If someone was mentally ill and uncontrollable\dangerous, they may not be allowed in a public hospital, they would probably go to special hospital. And possibly if your acting very inappropriately in the hospital.
No, at eighteen, you are legally an adult, and the law says you are mentally competent enough to be fully responsible for your actions. Seventeen and below is a minor.
if you do then see your gp and your local hospital if you dont do this your scrude
The first question is whether he is mentally competent to transfer property now and whether he was mentally competent when he wrote the will. If he isn't legally competent to transfer the property now, it will be very expensive to create a conservatorship so that someone (the conservator) can transfer the property for him. Probably easiest to just rely on the will, assuming it is valid.
Yes. As long as a person is mentally and physically competent, and holds a current drivers' licence, he/she can drive in Australia.
An Asylum or a Psychiatric Hospital, is an institution for the care of people who are mentally ill