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Who decides if I get any money from my dads estate, the Administrator of my fathers estate? |
Who decides if I get any money from my dads estate, the Administrator of my fathers estate? Hire a lawyer before it is all stolen from you. Sounds like the got control, but it sounds shady to me. I don't know their intentions, but you might look into getting some free legal counsel. Call your local city hall or country court house to find out more info on that. Check out this site www.lawinfo.com Every state has laws of "intestate succession" that determine who gets what when someone dies without a will or a living trust. The first order of business would be to make sure your father's final bills were taken care of and then the court can supervise distribution of the assets. You should retain a local attorney to advise you on exactly how much you are entitle to. Typically the assets will go to the closes relatives firsts (i.e. spouse and children). However the exact details are a matter of state law. The estate should go to probate court where the judge decides who gets what. If there was no will the court should have also assigned the administor for the will. If there was no signed and documented Will, your father's Estate should pass first to his spouse, then to his heirs (his children). The Courts should appoint an Executor/Executrix to see that the Estate is divided equally and fairly. If the Court has been bypassed in making this decision, contact your DA's office. If they can't help you, they'll give you proper instruction on what to do. I would think that not only are your aunt and uncle guilty of hanky-panky, their attorney is as well. It's hard to answer this question without knowing what the will actually stated. If there was a provision that you are entitled to some sort of inheritance, settlement, or other type of compensation, then I say you have a case. you need to go and see a lawyer and get him/her to look into the will and what is happening with it Generally they have to distrubute as the decedant intended. If that wasn't the case, an administrator could always give everything to themselves. The law decides. There is no legal will so the estate needs to be probated and there is a formula to spit up the proceeds of the estate. You aunt and Uncle and merely the executors and as such are entitled to some reasonable expenses for which they must provide a full accounting. They have no say in who gets what. You are entitled to an accounting upon request. You can challenge any decision you think are not right via the courts. On the other hand there must be some reason for your paranoia. Your age would have been helpful, but here goes...u need 2 go 2 the courts & ask for a guardianship over your inheritance. explain how u feel & ask a judge rule in your favor. This would b orphans court. don't need auntie & unk spending what is legally yours. But if u do not do this soon it could b gone. Age is no restricter as the court w/ protect u on your behalf no matter how old u r. Get ready for hell once they find out thru court papers. You dad's wife (if there is one), and any other siblings (if there are any) is where the money should go. You are considered "Heir". If I were to die tomorrow and left a bunch of money sitting in the bank with no will, my children would get it because they are considered "legal heirs". Since they are minors, a trustee would be assigned, probably my sister or mother to insure their money is properly handled. I'm pretty sure thats how it works everywhere. I get a consultation with a lawyer in your area. |
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whoever pays the bills for the state of Nebraska, tax payers. ...Get a lawyer...it's going to have to be broken unfortunately. Check the law yourself and see if there is a statute of limitations on taking wills to probate. ...If you are a beneficiary of the estate, a necessary party, then you can file an application in the proceeding asking for Letters of Administration. ...First of all, it would of have had to been all legally documented and notarized etc. for her to be legal, to have it in the first place! Second he would have had a copy of all the papers and a... As long as it is witnessed properly and there is no finding of coercion, then it will probably be held valid. I'm a little unclear by what you meant, but I think that should answer the questi... The government does not audit particular kinds of claims, but returns in their entirety. The selection criteria for an audit depends more on how the information provided compares to other informati... I love this question, your first thought is lets sue someone. Say you got whiplash on the way to the estate agents too. ...Its impossible, unethical and illegal for anyone here to give you specific advice without knowing what state you're talking about. Generally, the laws of the US say that if there is a wil... |
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