Generally, the distribution depends on the size of the estate and the rules of intestacy under English law. The surviving spouse would receive the first £250,000. A child would get a portion of any amount over that limit. This is general information only. You should seek legal advice.
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No. Jon Gosselins father is deceased, and his mother is remarried and does not live close by.
David Cook's father is Stanley Cook, who divorced his mum, Beth Cook, and remarried. I do not know he name of David's stepmum
remarried only two months after his father's death.
Being born out of wedlock does not bar a child from inheriting from his deceased father. However, if the father left the child out of the will then that child might not be able to inherit anything without contesting the will in court.
Can, but the father can challenge it in probate.
Laws vary. Generally, the surviving spouse and the children inherit in an intestate (without a Will) estate. If you were not married to the father then his children would inherit his estate. You can check the laws in your jurisdiction by performing an online search for "intestacy laws- your jurisdiction".
If a man dies and is survived by his father and sister, the father would likely inherit the man's assets as a direct blood relative. In the absence of a will specifying otherwise, the father would typically be the primary heir according to intestate succession laws.
yes there is. if your mother remarried and then remarried again it would be considered your second step father.
What does the divorce decree say? Usually it specifies who retains title to the house, or changes the type of ownership. If it was changed to tenancy in common, you would still have your half and your son would inherit his father's half. If it was changed to joint tenancy, you would inherit the house. If the divorce decree didn't specify a change, this could be where it ended up. If ex-husband ended up with it alone, your son would inherit the house. Consult a probate attorney for the specific laws in your state regarding both divorce and intestate cases.
Actually anyone can still come buy it, mother or father could still inherit it also.
Beyonce's father has not yet remarried.
All your father's children are entitled to an equal share in his estate. You can check the laws of intestate distribution at the related question link provided below.
That depends on where your father lived with his last wife, how they held title to property, if he died testate or intestate and the laws of intestacy of the state where he died or owned property. If your father owned his property as a joint tenant with the right of survivorship with his third wife then you get nothing. If he acquired his property during his marriage in a community property state then you get nothing. You may inherit a portion if he owned property in his own name and died intestate or if he left property to you in his will. It depends on a lot of other details.
No, they divorced when he was about 6. His father remarried when he was 6 or 7, and his mother remarried last April.
Officially, I think the term is "no relation." Your father-in-law's father-in-law is, assuming no one's gotten remarried, your wife's mother's father. His sister would be your wife's great-aunt, and her daugher would be your wife's first cousin, once removed.There's not really any concise term for that in English. There may be in some other languages, but I don't know what it would be.If your wife's parents got divorced and her father remarried so that his father-in-law is not your wife's mother's father, then "no relation" is definitely the correct answer.
Father
She is set to inherit her grandmother's antique jewelry collection.