No. You are not personally responsible for your sister's debts. The estate is responsible for the debts of the decedent.
The neigbor's sister was said to have committed suicide.
He only had a brother, whom committed suicide, no sister.
Neither, his sister Vicky Lynn commited suicide in 1994, by overdose.
Yes, Vickie Lynn She committed suicide by overdosing in 1994
He committed Suicide by hanging him self in the bathroom and his sister found him. He did this because he was bullied.
No. Only the court can appoint an executor. You could petition the court to name your sister as co-executor but make certain you provide a good reason to support your request.
Only the executor has the authority to liquidate assets of the estate.
that reason is because she was your sister and you can't get over her death or because she was really really close to you and you loved her more than anything.
The executor is responsible for maintaining the value of the estate. That includes insuring that no one removes goods before they are properly inventoried and valued. It also insures that no one gets something without letting anyone else get a chance.
If your parents are deceased the Power of Attorney expired when they died. It is no longer in effect. If your sister used their credit card after their death then she committed a criminal act and could be prosecuted. Her use of the crdit card has nothing to do with their estate. She is responsible for her actions. If she charged on the account after your parents death, the credit card company can't attach the real estate you inherited. They would need to bring charges against your sister. You should cooperate by providing them with any information you have that would help in their investigation, where they can find your sister and the circumstances that enabled her to use your parents credit card (her being the executor of their estates).
Robert Schumann had a sister that committed suicide because she could not stand any longer with her mental instability.
ohh as i , i leave them