If you get any trace in the form of receipt,policy copy,letter from any Insuc. co. in the name of your deceased wife, you can approach them for needful action.
How can I find out if my decease father placed us on his life insurance. He remarried and his wife has not forwarded any documents to us
The contingent beneficiary, if one was named.
No, an ex-spouse can't collect a deceased husbands insurance if the first wife is listed as beneficiary even if the fist wife is now deceased. The money will go to the beneficiary's heirs.
No, if she was the named beneficiary the benefits belongs to her, and she has no legal responsibility for the deceased's children.
In most cases it will default to the estate.
In order to ensure that a wife collects her deceased husband's insurance policy, it is beneficial to transfer the beneficiary of the policy while the husband is still alive. If the beneficiary of the policy is also deceased, it would be wise to seek legal help.
If the wife is not named as a beneficiary then she would have no claim on the policy proceeds.
The beneficiaries on your life insurance policy will receive the life insurance benefits. Please make sure your policy is updated with the correct beneficiaries. Many people forget to update their life insurance policy after divorce, or any other major life event and unfortunately the ex-husband or ex-wife receives the benefits. If all the beneficiaries named on the policy are deceased, then the benefit will go to the insured's estate (which may or may not go to the deceased children. The only way to ensure that the benefits are going to the intended person(s), is to update your insurance policy's beneficiaries.
Before she died, your wife was his aunt and your were his uncle. He never referred to you as his uncle-in-law and you never called him your nephew-in-law. Now that your wife is gone, you are still his uncle and he is still your nephew, period. Or, if you need to be very precise because you find another relationship developing in your life, he is your "deceased wife's nephew."
In your case, no, the proceeds will not be included in the estate of the decedent. Since you were the named beneficiary the proceeds pass directly to you. Of course, upon your death they will be included in your estate. Whether or not a judgment against your husband will allow the other party to go after your assets is obviously a more complicated question. But the life insurance is not part of his estate.
Yes it covers life insurance not health insurance
no she does not