The author posted a question in Legal Advice
Debtor died, no heirs identified, who to sue and from whom to demand a refund? and got a better answer
Response from
You really need to go to court for the return of the debt, and the court will really identify the heirs. Another question - no one will force them to accept the inheritance?
Response from 0[+++]
You really have to sue for repayment, and the court will really determine the heirs. Another issue is that no one will force them to accept the inheritance.
You really have to sue for repayment, and the court will really determine the heirs. Another issue is that no one will force them to accept the inheritance.
Response from 0[+++++]
You should file for repayment of the debt, and the court will determine the heirs conclusion: debtors should be insured and cared for, nurtured and nurtured
You should file for repayment of the debt, and the court will determine the heirs conclusion: debtors should be insured and cared for, nurtured and nurtured
Response from 0[+++++]
Forgive and forget.
Forgive and forget.
Response from 0[+++++]
Has 6 months passed since the debtor died? If not, you have to wait, the heirs will be determined. If they have already passed, and there are no heirs anyway, you should turn to the state, represented by the FMS at the debtor's place of residence, as an heir to escheat. But the second option, you know, is absolutely lose TODAY: Do not know exactly, do not write! What does it mean to file for repayment? Nasabstract lawsuits do not. The statement of claim must always accurately name the defendant name, place of residence.
Has 6 months passed since the debtor died? If not, you have to wait, the heirs will be determined. If they have already passed, and there are no heirs anyway, you should turn to the state, represented by the FMS at the debtor's place of residence, as an heir to escheat. But the second option, you know, is absolutely lose TODAY: Do not know exactly, do not write! What does it mean to file for repayment? Nasabstract lawsuits do not. The statement of claim must always accurately name the defendant name, place of residence.
Response from 0[+++++]
If there are no heirs, the state inherits the property, and him present, your claims!
If there are no heirs, the state inherits the property, and him present, your claims!
Response from 0[+++++]
Nisk is presented to the estate of a deceased debtor. What? You've never heard of it? You should read the laws!
Nisk is presented to the estate of a deceased debtor. What? You've never heard of it? You should read the laws!