Right of sepulcher missouri 2025

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The right of sepulcher grants individuals the authority to determine the final resting place of a deceased loved one. This age-old right ensures the closest family members can decide on burial or cremation processes.
In Missouri, if you are married and you die without a will, what your spouse gets depends on whether or not you have living descendants -- children, grandchildren, or great-grandchildren. If you dont, then your spouse inherits all of your intestate property.
At death of one of two or more beneficiaries, who hold their interests in the custodial property as joint tenants with right of survivorship or as tenants by the entirety, the custodial property belongs to the surviving beneficiary or beneficiaries as against the estate of the decedent.
Next of kin are more commonly called heirs and include a surviving spouse, surviving children, and descendants of surviving children. Children and descendants include biological and adopted children.
Tenancy in common (TIC) is a legal arrangement in which two or more parties share ownership rights to real property. It comes with what might be a significant drawback, however: A TIC carries no rights of survivorship.
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Thus, on the death of one co-owner, his or her interest will not pass to the surviving owner or owners but will pass as an individual share ing to his or her will or, if there is no will, by the law determining heirs. How is a Joint Tenancy Created, and What Property Can Be So Held?
By law the legal next of kin is often responsible for marking funeral arrangements, unless a Power of Attorney (POA) has been legally designated. Typically, the legal next of kin goes in order of spouse, children, parents, followed by siblings.

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