No. The co-executor must file a resignation with the probate court in order to free themselves of any obligations and responsibilities in the estate and to notify the world they will no longer be serving as co-executor.
I've never seen an advantage. They always seem to get into arguments with each other.
The executor IS the owner of the property, for the purpose of probate.
What is a small program that attaches to other files and self replicates and then sends itself to other computers without the users knowledge?
In New Jersey, it is illegal to record a conversation without the knowledge or consent of all parties involved.
no, confidence and knowledge are very different, therefor not having one would not go against the other.
The disadvantages of having a joint account areEither party can operate the account without the knowledge of the other partyThe bank cannot be liable to entertain claims when one party withdraws money without the knowledge of the other
It is illegal to record employees without their knowledge. It is not illegal to place surveillance cameras in the work place but other covert means like bugging offices are illegal.
we would be living as we do now... just without the knowledge of gravity and some other smartass wouldve thought of it :)
Direct immediate knowledge refers to information gained without the need for inference or processing through various mental steps. It is knowledge that is perceived or understood immediately without the intervention of other cognitive processes, such as reasoning or contemplation.
The word "other" in the question implies that you already have some idea of what can be shown. Without knowledge of what you already have "on your list" it is impossible to say what is other.
Private knowledge is something you know that you choose not to share with others. It might be something that only you know (for example you are starting to have a crush on somebody, or you did something secretly) or it can be something that only a few other people know.
A zero-knowledge proof is an interactive method for one party to prove to another that a mathematical statement is true without revealing anything other than the veracity of the statement.