YES, if you die, then the next of kin is responsible for your debt.
In general, the estate has primary responsibility, one of the reasons to create an estate. The spouse will typically be responsible for the debt.
The estate is responsible for all the debts of the deceased. Indirectly the spouse will have to pay them off from the estate before she can inherit.
No - the surviving spouse is not liable for the deceased person's bills !
no if they die the money they are owed will be taken out there bank account the remaning will be given out according to there will
Spouses share ownership of property, if it belongs to your spouse it belongs to you and therefore may be subject to any debt recovery measures used agaisnt you.
Only if they signed a contract or agreement to accept the responsibility. If not, the deceased's ESTATE becomes responsible for any debts.
Yes, you can be held responsible for it. The spouse is considered to have benefited from the agreement.
Oregon is not a community property state. Therefore the surviving spouse is only responsible for the deceased spouse's medical bills if he or she entered into a financial agreement with the attending hospital and/or physicians or other such agencies.
no
The basic assumption is that yes, the spouse is jointly responsible. It is assumed that both spouses will benefit from the transactions.
In Georgia, as in most states, life insurance proceeds to a named beneficiary become the property of the beneficiary and are therefore not accessible to the creditors of the decedent. Of course, this does not apply to joint debt between the spouses or any debt solely in the name of the surviving spouse. In short, if the surviving spouse's name is not on the debt of the decedent, the surviving spouse has no legal obligation to pay such debt.