If all her children are still living you have no rights in her property unless she left a share to you in her Will.If all her children are still living you have no rights in her property unless she left a share to you in her Will.If all her children are still living you have no rights in her property unless she left a share to you in her Will.If all her children are still living you have no rights in her property unless she left a share to you in her Will.
property,cleavage,fracture,streak
No, she is not your property to share.
the noble gases have their valence shell complete
All elements in group 16 share similar properties because their valence shells all contain the s2p4 electron configuration.
Yes: they all possess the property of being invisible to me and others on Answers.com
They share many properties, but one is that they all have 7 valence electrons.
A time share works by you paying a percentage of a total for a house, condominium or apartment. Other people pay the rest of the percentage and you all share the property.
A time share works by you paying a percentage of a total for a house, condominium or apartment. Other people pay the rest of the percentage and you all share the property.
They all tend to be shiny. They're not all strong as alkali metals can be cut by a normal knife.
Yes, a tenant in common can rent out their share of the property to another party.
It depends on what the will states. If the will states that you are the sole beneficiary of all of the decedent's property, you will receive whatever share the decedent owned of the jointly-owned property. The decedent's share of the property will become your share. If there are other beneficiaries and the division of ownership is not specified in the will, the decedent's share of the jointly-owned property will be divided equally amongst the beneficiaries. If the will states a specific division amongst beneficiaries (e.g. 1/2 interest to John Doe, 1/4 interest to Jane Doe and 1/4 interest to Bob Doe), then the decedent's share of the jointly owned property will be divided amongst the beneficiaries accordingly. But, the quick answer to your question is that just because someone else who is still alive has a share of the decedent's property doesn't mean that the entire property reverts to that alive shareholder. The decedent's interest in the property will go to his or her heirs in the same proportion that the decedent owned the property when he or she was alive.