If anyone young adult or older lives in the house when the parents die then the child stays however if the parents die and there is no one young adult or older the child goes to a social worker. If this happens go to edit town and move the child to the relatives house.
Teenagers may live on there own and therefore look after children. For Example, if you make a family with 2 adults, 1 Teen, and 1 child, and then kill both adults, you may continue to play the household provided you don't kill the teenager.
Usually the children just inherit the parents' money once they die, as long as the children continue to live under the same household as their parents once they die.
when your sim has a baby, it will turn into a child sometime after, but children never grow into adults, unless there parents die and replaced them, and adults never get any older.
Close relatives or friends can get temporary custody until it gets permanent in court. Or they end up in foster care.
It can be relatives or friend of the family if they are found fit by the court or a foster family if there are no relatives.
The debts of the parents are paid by the parent's estate, not their children.
Sending them to nearby relatives that you trust.
The court will appoint a guardian and unless there are willing and suitable relatives they will first go to foster care and then adoption depending a little on how old they are. Parents of minor children should always make a Will and and arrange to name a guardian in the case of premature death.
Depends on the rank of the parents. They inherit the title when the parents die.
I don't know about Sims Life Stories but in Sims 2(ps2) one of my Sims died from lack of food and water. When I put her in a room with no doors, but she eventaly died. So YES your Sims can die.OF COURSE YOU CAN Just make em die of starvation or sumthing
Then their children claim all of the parents' possessions when they come of age. This is part of inheiritance.
Laws of intestacy determine how a person's property is distributed if they die without a will. These laws prioritize family members like spouses, children, and parents to inherit the deceased's assets. If there are no eligible relatives, the state may acquire the property.
The exact distribution depends on the state you are in but when a person dies without a will and direct decendents the estate still goes through probate. Generally probate distributes the estate (after taxes) to the wife and children, the parents (of the deceased), the siblings, the nephew and nieces and then to more remote relatives such as cousins, etc. If there is no relatives to distribute to and no will then the estate goes to the state.