No. A POA expires when the principal dies.
In the US: Your father cannot "appoint" anyone as attorney-in-fact under a POA for your mother.That POA would not be legal unless your mother signed it. If she did sign it she can revoke it at any time in writing and deliver a copy to your brother and any facility where it has been used in the past. If she didn't sign it, the POA was only effective for your father and it expired when he died. Only your mother can appoint her own attorney-in-fact, voluntarily. She is an independent adult with her very own legal existence and rights. She can execute a POA and appoint who she chooses.
Yes, the Power of Attorney (POA) remains legal even after the death of the father, as the authority granted to the son pertains to the mother, not the father. However, the son can only act on behalf of the mother in accordance with the terms of the POA. If the mother passes away, the POA becomes void. It's important to ensure that the POA complies with relevant laws and requirements in the jurisdiction where it was created.
You cannot make any changes to the Power of Attorney. Unless it is a Durable POA that your father executed when he was legally capable, it is no longer active. A regular POA is extinguished when the person who executed it becomes legally incapacitated. An attorney-in-fact appointed under a Durable POA can continue to act even after the principal has become physically or legally incapacitated. You should consult with an attorney. If your father is incapable of handling his own affairs and you think your siblings may be mishandling them, you can petition to be appointed your father's legal guardian or conservator. You should consult with an attorney who specializes in elder law ASAP.
It could be Cooper Menkin's, Sue's ex-boyfriend and Shannon Beiste's husband, but no one really knows for sure. It's a possibility Blaine's brother, Cooper, is the father as he will be in the next episode. The next episode, Big Brother, airs on April 10, so she may reveal the father's identity then. Hope this helped!
No. If there is a will then the executor of the will MUST do what the will says.
No. The step father has no legal standing on which to sue for child support.No. The step father has no legal standing on which to sue for child support.No. The step father has no legal standing on which to sue for child support.No. The step father has no legal standing on which to sue for child support.
If your brother-in-law is your spouse's brother, then his father is your father-in-law - because he is your spouse's father. If your brother-in-law is your sister's husband, then his father is not your father-in-law.
If by POA you mean power of attorney then yes it can be an expensive, drawn out task of achieving that status. It is done through the courts and the legal costs tend to be on the high end.
Yes if you have a general POA or if that power is specifically mentioned in a limited POA and if your father has tenants. The tenants you collect from have the right to see the original POA and should be provided with a copy for their records to show that you arranged for them to pay over the rent to you. They should pay by check made out to your father.
Your father's father's brother is your great uncle.
To your father 'Brother', to your father's father 'Son', to you 'Uncle'.