You seem to be asking about "Disposition of Personal Property without Administration." There is information available on the Internet about what to do. It requires filing the necessary paperwork in the office of the Clerk of the Circuit Court.
Refer to the link for the Pinellas County Clerk of the Circuit Court: http://clerk.co.pinellas.fl.us/aspInclude2/ASPInclude.asp?pageName=dispoform.htm
I think this is the form: http://clerk.co.pinellas.fl.us/aspInclude2/dispo-form.pdf
This is a sample of how it is filled out: http://clerk.co.pinellas.fl.us/aspInclude2/dispo-form-SAMPLE.pdf
Contact your local Clerk of Circuit Court for the County in which the decedent lived. You may ultimately need the services of an attorney, but it appears that you may be able to do everything yourself.
2007-05-15 05:52:41
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answer #1
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answered by Mark 7
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Without a CERTIFIED COPY of the death certificate, no one will be getting ANY money out.... By CERTIFIED I mean it HAS to come directly from City Hall and have the EMBOSED SEAL of the City embedded on it---NO PHOTO COPY is legal for any transactions after a death... Oh and a little clue---while your cousin's son is THERE, have him get at LEAST 4 of these embossed CERTIFIED death certificates--he or the executor of the estate or whomever is appointed as executor will have to have CERTIFIED copies to report to Social Security, and Insurance the man may have had, Motor vehicles AND any bank that the man had a ANY kind of loan with, and various other places. No one will accept just a photo copy. Oh and I know in New York those certified copies cost $10 a PIECE ...
2007-05-15 13:35:29
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answer #2
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answered by LittleBarb 7
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sorry about your loss and good luck. possibly an affadavit of survivorship. it shows that he is the sole survivor or acting in the interests of the survivors. search findlaw.com for more info specific to florida
2007-05-15 12:29:27
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answer #3
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answered by here to help 7
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He should be able to go to the bank where the funds are. They should have the paperwork he needs. They might request a death certificate too.
2007-05-15 12:28:16
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answer #4
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answered by lesmodee 2
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He needs to be appointed personal representative on the estate. Get an attorney and get this started. Once he is appointed personal rep then he will be able to handle all his estate.
2007-05-15 12:29:09
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answer #5
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answered by stormey_84074 3
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wouldn't a death certicate be helpful in this situation? Hopefully, your cousin is named on the account as a beneficiary too.
2007-05-15 12:28:03
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answer #6
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answered by Brand X 6
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tell him to bring in the death certificate
2007-05-15 12:32:20
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answer #7
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answered by Jaxs 4
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