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Just the one whose parent it was. Unless their spouse was extremely close to their inlaw.
No, a person will not be able to get a Green Card if they are no longer with their spouse.
Just as you always did for that child. Their spouse is, after all , your daughter or son-in-law, and presumably as much a part of your family as the child of your body .
If you put a stamp on the card and an address to send it off to, it will go to that address. Otherwise, the birthday card may just get thrown out by the mail person, or perhaps the mail person will think its for them.
depending on who was using the card, that's who's fault it would be... I'm going to assume since it was your spouse's credit card, that your spouse is then responsible for it.
Yes, she can. Having a mental illness is not a "get out of divorce free" card.
yes the parent can with their card
That means the person whose name is on the green card is the spouse of a son or daughter of a U.S. Citizen.
People can apply for credit cards at age 18, although they can apply through a spouse or parent if they are under 17. However, in case of debt, the responsibility lies solely on said spouse or parent. There is new legislation that is attempting to make it illegal for anyone under 21 to apply for a credit card.
No, a creditor would not issue a card or extend credit on the account of a deceased spouse. The creditor might be willing to issue a card to the surviving spouse based on his or her own financial situation.
In most cases, no. Per credit card company rules, the person who signed the back of the card is the only person allowed to use it, and if the signature on the back of the card doesn't match the signature on the charge draft, then an ID check is triggered and the retailer has to verify that the person presenting the card is the person named on the card. It has to be that person, not their husband/wife/etc. If the husband/wife is an authorized user on the wife/husband's account, the credit card issuer would issue an additional card for that authorized user.
No, an adult child cannot legally use the credit card of a deceased parent in the state of Georgia without authorization. Unauthorized use of a deceased person's credit card could be considered fraud and may have legal consequences.