My name is Rodney e Chester and in 2009 or early 2010 I was made beneficiary of a policy by my grandfather Ben E Butler SSN 404-42-1347. He had me sign a document that needed my SSN and he had to get it notarized before sending it in. I wasn't sure of the policy his insurance was under after he passed on Aug,6 2010. I've been trying to get information from the company The Standard insurance company which was the insurance company his job used for life insurance. He was a deputy for the maricopa county sherriffs office in Arizona. The standard said that I was the benefactor of his policy and gave me a claim number. They told me that I needed to get the policy from the Maricopa county sheriffs office and they would need to send the policy info to The Standard Insurance company. After contacting the sheriffs office about my grandfathers claim they told me that they have no paperwork on my grandfather at all. It was like he hadn't worked for them at all not finding any info or any work history on him at all. I don't know what to do or were to go can you please help me track this down please..... Thank You Rodney E Chester
Unless there is something I am missing (or do not know), it seems unusual for an insurance company to need the actual policy to approve a life insurance claim. The policy number should be enough. I would call them back and speak to a supervisor. I hope this helps!
That depends on the laws and rules of the state where the will was probated. All states have laws or court rules that require executors to give written notification of the probate of a will to the beneficiaries named within a certain period of time. In New Jersey, notification must be made within 60 days of the date of the probate of the will. Other states will have different time periods.
Yes.
If the owner of the savings bonds has died, then the bonds are inherited by the beneficiary, unless the beneficiary has also died in which case the bonds go to the estate of the beneficiary. If you don't want the bonds to be inhertied by the named beneficiary or the estate of the beneficiary, I would like to know what legal basis you have for taking control of those bonds. We already know that you are neither the owner (who has died) nor the beneficiary. So what is your claim based upon? I doubt that you have any legal basis to change the benefciary.
Her attorney will call you.
The only reason a beneficiary would add money to an estate would be if they owed money to the estate at the death of the deceased.
The possessive form for the noun beneficiary is beneficiary's.
where is infomation on beneficiary
The plural of beneficiary is beneficiaries.The plural of the singular noun beneficiary is beneficiaries.
No. A beneficiary has no authority to name a beneficiary of another's property. Only the principal can name the beneficiary. Generally, if the primary beneficiary declines to accept the inheritance then the gift will lapse and the property will be included in the estate.
Incase something happens to the first beneficiary. Such as: they pass away.
An "Advanced Beneficiary Notice" (ABN) is a notice given to Medicare beneficiaries letting them know what medical services Medicare is not likely to pay for, and is given to patients before the service is performed.
It means that if you want to change the beneficiary, the beneficiary themselves must sign off on it.
If the beneficiary of a policy has died, the estate of the beneficiary can still collect the insurance payment, assuming that the beneficiary does have an heir or heirs of some kind (as most people do). Note that this is a fairly unusual situation, because normally when a beneficiary dies, a new beneficiary is named. There is no reason to allow the policy to have no living beneficiary, unless the insured and the beneficiary happen to die at about the same time, and there is no time to name a new beneficiary.