The court will appoint an executor for the estate. They will have the authority to transfer the property according to the intestacy laws of the state. It may also require the court's approval.
No, the widow and children would have no legal right to the benefit. The insured would have to make that change himself. If it hadn't been done before he deceased, it cannot be changed.
Israel
stop being sexist
yes there is no change
There are about 294 quotations in the New Testament from the Old Testament. But of these you will seldom find exactly the same words in the two quotations because the Old Testament was written in Hebrew and the New Testament in Greek originally; and through many translations the words also change somewhat. There are also, besides these, about 633 allusions to Old Testament Scriptures in the New Testament.
Most states have a procedure for a spouse or child to change the title of a deceased spouse or parent's motor vehicle to the survivor. This does not change the loan, however, if there is one on the vehicle. You may have to refinance.
St. Anne, the mother of the Blessed Virgin, marked the change between the Old Testament and the New Testament.
Nothing happens. If it wasn't changed, it wasn't changed. Only the (presumably now deceased) insured can change it.
Because children are too immature to change the rules.
There will be different requirements depending on the state you live in. In California, the next of kin can affect a change of title on a car owned by a person deceased.
The brother does not have the ability to change someone else's will. Only the person writing the will can change it.
A Last Will and Testament is one of the most anciently honored legal documents known to humankind. Of course you cannot change a person's Will. The only entity that can change the provisions in a Will is a court with jurisdiction over probate matters. Courts rarely make changes to Wills. The only power the petitioner has is to petition the court to allow the Will and appoint the executor. The appointed executor has only the power to distribute the estate according to the provisions in the Will and the probate laws, under the supervision of the court. Altering a Will is against the law.