Phone bills will the the responsibility of the estate. The estate has to pay off the debts. If the estate cannot do so, they distribute as best they can. If the court approves the distribution, the debts are ended.
In most states the mortuary bill is the responsibility of the estate of the deceased. But many mortuaries bestow it upon the family, particularly the person who made arrangements, to pay the bill.
The guarantor is the person responsible for a medical bill. For a child, the guarantor is usually a parent.
depends did she buy a lot? Or all of it?
No they are not personally responsible for the medical bill. One of the primary reasons to open an estate is to resolve such debts. The estate has to pay off the debts. If the estate cannot do so, they distribute as best they can. If the court approves the distribution, the debts are ended.
The spouse indirectly will pay, as they cannot inherit until they are resolved. In Maryland the estate is responsible.
In West Virginia, as in all states, the estate is responsible for all the debts of the deceased. That means before the estate can be settled, all debts have to be cleared. If there is not enough in the estate to cover them, there are some people who will not get paid.
Yes, but he is unlikely to get paid. The family of the deceased owes nothing for the decedent's debt load unless they cosigned a loan.
Send it to the administrator of the estate of the deceased person.
In Ohio, the spouse will indirectly be responsible. The estate must resolve all debts. Until that is done, the spouse cannot inherit anything.
Unlikely but the estate may have obligations. The question itself is very vague. Do you mean medical bills? Credit card bills? Utility bills? Exactly what type of debt? No one is responsible for a medical bill, credit card bill (unless they're in joint names), utility bills except for the person the bill is in their name. Paying a spouse's hospital bill after their death is unnecessary. It doesn't matter if it's AZ or any place in the U. S. The only bill you must pay is the mortgage itself otherwise you will lose the property if that's not paid. Also a car note if that's not paid the car will be repo-ed. Not paying the electric bill means no electric the same for the cable bill. Paying any bills out of the estate is up to the individual who inherits the estate but in my opinion the bill dies with the deceased. Think about it once a person is dead you tell the bill collector they're no longer alive you won't get another phone call or another bill since you can't collect from the dead.
The estate is responsible for medical bills of the deceased. That means before the estate can be settled, all debts have to be cleared. If there is not enough in the estate to cover them, there are some people who will not get paid. The wife may not inherit anything from the spouse if there are not enough assets to cover the debts.
That depends on what you mean. On the phone that is making the call, and on that person's phone bill, the call will show up at the time in the time zone from which the call was placed. The phone of the person receiving the call, and that person's phone bill (if, for example, you pay for incoming calls on a cellphone), will show the call at the time it was received.