Not unless you cosigned anything with him. If you did, you will be responsible for those debts. If they are in his name only, they can only come after his estate (so if he leaves you anything, they might try to go after it in court.)
The estate is responsible for the decedent's debts.
The estate is responsible for the debts. Until they are resolved, nothing can be distributed.
Siblings are not typically responsible for debts unless they signed for them. The estate has to settle the debts.
The wife is not directly responsible unless she is on the insurance or contract. Most courts would rule that the spouse benefits from the debts and can be held responsible. The estate should pay the debts before she can inherit anything.
The wife is not directly responsible unless she is on the contract. Most rules state that the spouse benefits from the debts and can be held responsible. The estate has to pay the debts before she can inherit anything.
No
The wife is not directly responsible unless she is on the contract. Most Canadian courts would rule that the spouse benefits from the debts and can be held responsible. The estate has to pay the debts before she can inherit anything.
The parent's estate will be responsible. If there are not enough assets, the debts may not get paid.
When someone dies, any debts they leave are paid out of their 'estate' (the money and property they leave behind). You're only responsible for their debts if you had a joint loan or agreement or provided a loan guarantee - you aren't automatically responsible for a husband's, wife's or civil partner's debts.
The person's estate pays for all outstanding debts.
No, not unless you are a joint debtor/account holder.
In most cases the debts of the deceased are the responsibility of the estate. Anyone that was also a co-signer on any of the agreements might also be responsible. Consult a probate attorney in your jurisdiction for help.