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  2. What happens to your debt after you die? How to protect your ...

    www.aol.com/finance/happens-debt-die-protect...

    Some debts can be inherited. It depends on the debt type and which state you live in. ... Many parents make their children authorized users on their account, but this is not the same as a joint ...

  3. Generational Debt Transfer: Can You Inherit Debt? - AOL

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  4. What happens to your loan debt after you die? - AOL

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    If you are married and have moved out of a community property state since taking on the loan, debt consolidation can protect your spouse from inheriting that debt. Remove any cosigners or joint ...

  5. Estate tax in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Estate_tax_in_the_United...

    In addition, a maximum amount, varying year by year, can be given by an individual, before and/or upon their death, without incurring federal gift or estate taxes: [4] $5,340,000 for estates of persons dying in 2014 [5] and 2015, [6] $5,450,000 (effectively $10.90 million per married couple, assuming the deceased spouse did not leave assets to ...

  6. Inheritance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inheritance

    The order of inheritance is set out: a man's sons inherit first, daughters if no sons, brothers if he has no children, and so on. [ 4 ] Later, in Numbers 36, some of the heads of the families of the tribe of Manasseh come to Moses and point out that, if a daughter inherits and then marries a man not from her paternal tribe, her land will pass ...

  7. Testamentary trust - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Testamentary_trust

    A testamentary trust provides a way for assets devolving to minor children to be protected until the children are capable of fending for themselves; [3] A testamentary trust has low upfront costs, usually only the cost of preparing the will in such a way as to address the trust, and the fees involved in dealing with the judicial system during probate.

  8. Who Will Pay My Parents' Debt When They Die? - AOL

    www.aol.com/pay-parents-debt-die-161500605.html

    “So if you inherit $100,000, you are, in theory, responsible for up to $100,000 of your parent’s debt. In fact, many creditors walk away without filing claims whatsoever.”

  9. Slayer rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slayer_rule

    In Mutual Life v.Armstrong (1886), the first American case to consider the issue of whether a slayer could profit from their crime, the US Supreme Court set forth the No Profit theory (the term "No Profit" was coined by legal scholar Adam D. Hansen in an effort to distinguish early common law cases that applied a similar outcome when dealing with slayers), [1] a public policy justification of ...