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Insurance Reimbursement

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jquinn

Junior Member
What is the name of your state? VA

My father recently passed away. He had an 8,000.00 life policy with my sister and I as the benefitiaries. We used this cash to bury or father. His estate is now worth about 10,000.00. Are we intitled to a reimbursement of the 8000 dollars from the estate before it is divided among the heirs. In reason, we have a 15 year old brother I took custody of and a 18 year old sister. We are trying to split the money between them. However, we also have my father's new wife of 6 weeks. She is attempting to hide the assets. There was no will.
 


S

seniorjudge

Guest
jquinn said:
What is the name of your state? VA

My father recently passed away. He had an 8,000.00 life policy with my sister and I as the benefitiaries. We used this cash to bury or father. His estate is now worth about 10,000.00. Are we intitled to a reimbursement of the 8000 dollars from the estate before it is divided among the heirs. In reason, we have a 15 year old brother I took custody of and a 18 year old sister. We are trying to split the money between them. However, we also have my father's new wife of 6 weeks. She is attempting to hide the assets. There was no will.
Because pa did not make a will, he intended his stuff go as set forth below (which, it looks like, wife gets a minimum of 1/3).

You should definitely file a claim with the estate for reimbursement of the funeral costs.


http://www.finance.cch.com/pops/c50s10d190_VA.asp

Virginia Intestate Succession Laws

If any part of a Virginia decedent's estate is not effectively disposed of by will, the intestate share will be distributed in the following order and manner:

1. Surviving spouse. A surviving spouse is generally first in line to get any assets from the intestate estate. However, the amount a surviving spouse is entitled to varies as follows:

* If none of decedent's children or their descendants are alive, or if all of the decedent's surviving children are also children of the surviving spouse, the surviving spouse is entitled to the entire intestate estate.
* If one or more of the decedent's surviving children are not also issue of the surviving spouse, the surviving spouse gets one-third of the intestate estate and the surviving children or their descendants get two-thirds.

2. Heirs other than surviving spouse. Any part of the intestate estate not passing to the surviving spouse as indicated above, or the entire intestate estate if there is no surviving spouse, passes in the following order to:

1. Decedent's children and their descendants
2. Decedent's father and mother or the survivor
3. Decedent's brothers and sisters and their descendants
4. If none of the above are available, than decedent's paternal kin (as a group) and maternal kin (as a group) equally split the estate and distribute it as follows:
1. First to the grandfather and grandmother or the survivor.
2. If there are none, then to the uncles and aunts, and their descendants.
3. If there are none, then to the great grandfathers or great grandfather, and great grandmothers or great grandmother.
4. If there are none, then to the brothers and sisters of the grandfathers and grandmothers, and their descendants.
5. And so on, in other cases, without end, passing to the nearest lineal ancestors, and the descendants of such ancestors.
6. If there are no paternal kin, the whole shall go to the maternal kind; and if there are no maternal kin, the whole shall go to the paternal kin. If there are neither maternal nor paternal kin, the whole shall go to the kin of the husband or wife, in the like course as if such husband or wife had died entitled to the estate.

3. Commonwealth of Virginia. If after all this there is no taker under any of the above provisions, the intestate estate passes to the Commonwealth of Virginia.

Virginia Intestate Succession Law Fun Facts

* Relatives of the half blood inherit only half so much as those of the whole blood.
* Relatives of the decedent conceived before his death but born thereafter and children resulting from assisted conception born after decedent's death who are determined to be relatives of the decedent inherit as if they had been born in the lifetime of the decedent.
* When a spouse willfully deserts or abandons the decedent and the desertion or abandonment continues until the decedent's death, the spouse who deserted is barred of all interest in the decedent's intestate estate. The same applies to a parent that deserts his or her minor or incapacitated child. The theory, quite appropriately, is that somebody who abandons his responsibilities to a person should not later get a windfall when that person dies.
* Virginia's intestate succession laws, as well as other related laws, can be found in Title 64.1 of the Code of Virginia.

Copyright 2002 - 2005, CCH Tax and Accounting - A WoltersKluwer Company. All Rights Reserved.
 

jquinn

Junior Member
Thanks

Thank you for the quick reply. So, you are saying that we can claim 8000 dollars of the funeral cost that was left to us in his insurance policy? I do understand that she is entitled to 1/3 of the estate once all claims are settled. None of the children are from her. I am just trying to get most of the money back for the two youngest to try and help them during college.
 
S

seniorjudge

Guest
jquinn said:
Thank you for the quick reply. So, you are saying that we can claim 8000 dollars of the funeral cost that was left to us in his insurance policy? I do understand that she is entitled to 1/3 of the estate once all claims are settled. None of the children are from her. I am just trying to get most of the money back for the two youngest to try and help them during college.
Q: So, you are saying that we can claim 8000 dollars of the funeral cost that was left to us in his insurance policy?

A: I have no idea what that question means. What I said, and still say, is: "You should definitely file a claim with the estate for reimbursement of the funeral costs."

The insurance has nothing to do with the estate. You got some money from an insurance policy. It was your money. You used your money for the burial expenses of your father. If he has an estate with any money in it, then you should ask for reimbursement of the funeral expenses paid by you with your money.
 

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