Yes, in Michigan if a Probate Estate has been opened and you are a beneficiary to the estate, you are entitled to a copy of the Inventory which is a list of property in the estate and its value. This must be filed by the Personal Representative within 90 days from the date of appointment, unless extended by the Court for good cause. The inventory will list the amount in the account on the date of death or qualification of the Personal Representative.
Not necessarily. Any bank account which was held jointly with another person, or which had "payable on death" beneficiaries, is not a part of the probate estate which is affected by the will.
Not necessarily-you do have a right to an inventory of her probate estate, but if she designated death beneficiaries of her bank accounts, these may not be part of the inventory. An experienced attorney can help you determine what your legal rights are in this specific situation.
Not necessarily. However, the estate's executor will need to file an accounting of the estate with the probate court and you may be able to get access to the information that way.
If the accounts had named beneficiaries and the money passed directly to the beneficiaries, and you were not a named beneficiary, then you have no right to know what was in the accounts. If the accounts passed to her estate, then you would have a right to an accounting that would list the amounts in those accounts.
It depends on what she left you. If it was $500, that's what you get. If it was 10% of her estate, then you have the right to know the value of her entire estate.
If she is deceased yes. The executor of the estate is required to do an accounting to tell you what is part of the estate. If you believe the executor is not giving you all the information, hire an attorney, file a petition and subpoena the bank records.
You certainly do if you were named as a beneficiary of the account, and if there was no named beneficiary, then those accounts fall in to the residue clause of the will, and you were included in the residue clause of the will; don't let anyone talk you out of that inquiry. You need to what her will provisions stated regarding the distribution of her assets.
Only if the bank accounts are part of the estate. If they were joint accounts or a beneficiary was designated, then no, you do not have any rights with regard to the accounts.
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