The court will appoint an executor.
Whomever the probate court appoints.
The contents of a Will are your parents' personal and legal business. It is none of a child's business unless the parent shows you the Will, includes you in estate/will planning, or you are named the Executor/Executrix of the Will (this is not a minor child). When the parents die, the Executor/Executrix can contact the parents' Attorney to get a copy of the Will, if it's location is unknown at home.
The debts of the parents are paid by the parent's estate, not their children.
The sister in law's status as a tenant in common does not give her any special advantage to be appointed as executor. The daughter should continue with her petition for appointment as her parents' heir. As tenants in common, the parents' interest in the property will not pass to the sister in law.
Depends on the rank of the parents. They inherit the title when the parents die.
Then their children claim all of the parents' possessions when they come of age. This is part of inheiritance.
Only four of his five children survive.
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.
Depend on what the will says.
Sad
Since it takes both a man and a woman (a mother and a father) to conceive and have a baby, everyone is born of two parents. However, not everyone has parents, since parents do die. Children who have had both parents die are "orphans". But if they later become adopted, then they have adoptive parents.
No. Because stepparents can take children to the court center and tell the judge what do they have to use parents's credit card after they die.