RE: law for dead people

2002-09-28 Thread Anthony Wong
found this site. thought it might be useful for this discussion. http://freeadvice.com/ > I believe that if the net worth of the estate is less than zero, > the estate > is declared bankrupt as if it were any living person -- except > the dead guy > doesn't keep his house in Florida :-). >

RE: law for dead people

2002-09-28 Thread Ben Doom
I believe that if the net worth of the estate is less than zero, the estate is declared bankrupt as if it were any living person -- except the dead guy doesn't keep his house in Florida :-). However, if (for example) your wife buys a Ferrari in her name and yours and dies the next day, you are st

RE: law for dead people

2002-09-28 Thread Angel Stewart
Oh...And if your father who you haven't seen for 50 years dies, and has a 1 billion dollar estate...would you want that estate to be signed over to you if you are his only living heir? -Gel -Original Message- From: Raymond Camden [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Excuse the strang subject. ;

law for dead people

2002-09-28 Thread Raymond Camden
Excuse the strang subject. ;) How does the law apply to cases where a parent dies with debt? A friend thinks the debt passes to the children. To me, this seems like hogwash. If I haven't seen my father for 50 years, why would I have to incur his debt if I didn't cosign. I _do_ think it applies to

Argh two

2002-09-28 Thread e g
Ben - There are no spare anything useful. There is only a telephone jack and a midi connection open. Everything that attaches has cheerful little pictures and color codes. Dumb. Mr. Packard and Mr. Bell had better cross the street if they see me coming. Kevin - thank for the info. They had all of

Re: offensive humor

2002-09-28 Thread Jochem van Dieten
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > re: the Kamikaze - shouldn't that be made with Sake?? Don't know if it should, but with Sake it totally blows you away :) Jochem __ This list and all House of Fusion resources hosted by CFHosting.c