To find out if a living person has a will, you can ask them directly, as wills are typically private documents. If the person is willing to share, they may disclose the existence of a will and the names of beneficiaries. Additionally, you can check with local probate courts, as some jurisdictions require wills to be filed after a person's death, but they may not provide information on living individuals. For specific details about beneficiaries, that information is usually only accessible to the person who created the will.
No, only the person showing as the policy owner can make any changes on a life insurance policy, including changing the beneficiary. In some situations, the beneficiary is also the owner - in that case changes can be made.
A beneficiary is someone from whom someone else knowingly benefits.
Really a person should be happy with who they are not try to match themself with someone else.
If you want, doesn't really matter
Someone who gives part of themself to another so that they may have a better life. The person can be a living organ donor (e.g for kidneys or partial livers), or a cadaveric organ donor.
Yes the spouse of someone who is self employed can be a beneficiary of a health reimbursement arrangement. You can choose whoever you want as your beneficiary.
== == Ask to see the change of beneficiary forms. Verify signatures.
A beneficiary is the person who receives the benefit (usually money) from an insurance policy or a trust.
Deportment, meaning the way a person conducts themself, derives from the Old French Porter, meaning to carry. It describes how someone behaves, or "carries" themself.
No, not without that persons consent. Not to mention that person would have to qualify.
It depends on who's will it is. If the person is still living, you have no right to a copy. If the individual is deceased, you can apply to the court for a copy, either as your right as a beneficiary, or under the Freedom of Information Act.
No, that person would be charged with both fraud and forgery and be sent to jail. The only legal way someone other that the beneficiary can sign for a payment is if the benificiary is declared incompetant and a court assigns the signing authority to that person or the beneficiary voluntarily signs legal documentation giving someone else that right