I am assuming there was no will. Generally, in the United States, the estate would pass according to the laws of intestacy where the first sister lived. If the property was in her name it became part of her estate when she died. Generally, the surviving spouse and children inherit when there is no will. If there are no children then you MAY inherit a share as a sibling depending on your state laws. You can check the laws of intestacy for your state at the related question link below. Click on the link for your state to read the text of your state law. If you think you have an interest in your sister's estate you should seek the advice of an attorney who specializes in probate to discuss your options.
If the daughter is biologically related to you, it would be your great-grandchild. If your husband had his daughter before he married you (which would make her your step-daughter), it would be your step-great-grandchild.
I will assume that you conveyed your real property to your daughter and reserved a life estate in that property. In that case, your daughter is the owner of the property. She can leave it to someone in her will or it will pass to her heirs-at-law under the laws of intestacy in your state. Generally, if she is married with children, her husband and children will inherit the property if she has no will. You can check your state laws of intestacy at the related question link provided below. Your daughter's death will not affect your life estate. Whoever would inherit her property upon her death either by will or by intestacy would inherit it subject to your life estate.
Since your sister's husband's daughter is usually your sister's daughter, you are her aunt or uncle. If the husband's daughter is from a prior marriage (before he married your sister) then the daughter is not related to you. However, if the daughter is young, her father may have her call you and treat you as an aunt or uncle.
If the person leaving the remainder died before the spouse, it is a part of their estate and will get distributed per the will or the law.
If her name is on the title, most certainly. If not, the car is part of the estate and it will have to be resolved before she can inherit it.
If no one else's name is on the deed you would get it.
Possibly none. The deceased husband's rights to inherit as a named heir may have been terminated if he died before the person whose will you're reading. However, if the husband was named as an heir "per stirpes", or as a representative of his branch of the family ("to my children and their offspring"), then his estate and his lawful heirs may have a claim under the will.
Princess Anne Actually it's Princess Beatrice of York daughter of Prince Andrew who is the younger brother of Princess Anne. Succession is according to the rules of male-preference cognatic primogeniture under which sons inherit before daughters, and under which elder children inherit before younger ones of the same sex.
Her father gives his daughter his LAST NAME and when she marrys the daughter takes the new last name of the husband,so,her father takes back his LAST NAME
Before the birth of her daughter Blue Ivy Carter, she experienced a miscarriage. If this is what you meant by tragedy, then yes she and her husband Jay-Z did have a tragedy.
That would mean the decedent owned property in her own name when she died, made a will before she died and she devised (left) all her property to her husband in her will. He inherited everything.
Your sister's husband is your brother-in-law. The daughter of his sister is his niece, and your sister's niece, but is not related to you. Assuming the child was born to the woman before she met your brother, the daughter of the woman whose brother married your sister is not related to you.