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If there are no other heirs, it is okay for the wife to go to the office on her own; If there are other heirs, all the heirs need to be agreed to and signed by the heirs, and the handprint can be entrusted to the wife to handle it personally, but after the money is withdrawn, it should be distributed according to the order of inheritance and the proportion of negotiation.
If there are other heirs, the wife will encounter two problems if she goes to the notarization without the consent of the other heirs
1. The notary office will not accept it.
2. Even if you are lucky enough to handle the notarization, it will cause a lawsuit of property inheritance disputes.
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Hello, the money that your husband deposited in the bank before his death, after his death, his wife is personally unable to go to the notary office to work for the certificate.
Normally, the spouse is the first heir, but the children are also required.
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No, you cannot. You also have to bring your household registration book, ID card, and children to the notarization together.
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Yes, you can go with your household registration book and death certificate.
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You need to take your ID card and household registration book, marriage certificate, husband's ID card, death certificate, cremation certificate to go for notarization, because spouse, children and parents are the first heirs, and your husband's savings need to be withdrawn from other heirs' power of attorney, or go together.
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The husband saved the money and the wife died. Is it okay for an individual to go to the office? That him.
Her husband died, and his wife must be able to go to the office with the money saved? Is it only his wife who will inherit this property of his? If there are children, then she only has the children that her wife gives him to inherit the family.
It is not possible to inherit.
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If the husband has deposited money, the wife can go to collect it, and the wife must bring the husband's death certificate, as well as the ID card and household registration book.
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The wife can receive the money saved by her husband, but she can only withdraw the money with her identity document and the death certificate of the husband's death.
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Yes. Because you two are gone. That is, you can do it.
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The first in line to inherit the estate is: spouse, children, parents.
When the husband dies, the spouse is generally the first in line to the throne, but the office certificate requires the presence of the children and parents (generally the man).
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Just take the death certificate with you.
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You should be able to handle it with a death certificate.
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If your husband dies, contact the bank immediately.
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Of course you can, if you can't, then who can.
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If one spouse dies, the other spouse can withdraw the other party's bank deposit with his or her ID card and the ID card of his spouse, or his or her household registration booklet. If the deposit has been frozen, it cannot be withdrawn again. It needs to be signed by the person with the right to inherit, and then the kinship notarization can be carried out before the frozen deposit can be withdrawn.
Article 11 of the Notary Law shall, upon the application of a natural person, legal person or other organization, handle the following notarization matters by a notary public:
a) Contracts; b) inheritance;
3) Entrustment, declaration, gift, will;
4) division of property;
5) Bidding and bidding, auction;
6) Marital status, kinship, and adoption;
7) Birth, survival, death, identity, experience, education, degree, position, title, and whether there is a record of violations or crimes;
8) Articles of Association;
9) Preservation of evidence;
10) The signature, seal, and date on the document, and the copy or photocopy of the document are consistent with the original;
11) Other notarization matters voluntarily applied for by natural persons, legal persons, or other organizations.
For matters that laws and administrative regulations provide shall be notarized, the relevant natural person, legal person or other organization shall apply to a notary public for notarization.
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Legal Analysis: If there is a will during his lifetime, it will be inherited according to the will, and if there is not, it will be handled according to the legal inheritance, and the parents (if alive), spouse, and children will inherit it together. In principle, it is divided equally.
Legal basis: Civil Code of the People's Republic of China
Article 1121 Succession begins upon the death of the decedent. Where several persons who have a relationship of inheritance with each other die in the same event, and it is difficult to determine the time of death, it is presumed that the person who has no other heirs dies first. If there are other heirs, and the generations are different, it is presumed that the elder died first; If they are of the same generation, they are presumed to have died at the same time, and no inheritance occurs between them.
Article 1122:Inheritance is the lawful property left behind by a natural person when he or she dies. An inheritance that is not allowed to be inherited in accordance with the law or by its nature shall not be inherited.
Article 1123: After the commencement of inheritance, it shall be handled in accordance with the statutory succession; If there is a will, it shall be handled in accordance with the testamentary inheritance or bequest; Where there is a bequest and maintenance agreement, it shall be handled in accordance with the agreement.
Article 1124:Where the heirs renounce their inheritance after the inheritance has begun, they shall make an expression of renunciation of the inheritance in writing before the estate is disposed of; If there is no indication, it shall be deemed to have accepted the inheritance. The legatee shall, within 60 days after knowing of the bequest, make an expression of acceptance or renunciation of the bequest; If there is no indication of the source costume at the expiration date, it shall be deemed to have given up the bequest.
Article 1125:Where an heir commits any of the following acts, he or she shall lose the right of inheritance:
1) Intentionally killing the decedent;
2) killing other heirs for the purpose of competing for an inheritance;
3) Abandoning the decedent, or abusing the decedent, where the circumstances are serious;
4) Falsifying, tampering with, concealing, or destroying a will, where the circumstances are serious;
5) Using fraud or coercion to compel or obstruct the decedent's establishment, modification, or revocation of the will, where the circumstances are serious.
Where the heirs have the conduct in items 3 through 5 of the preceding paragraph, truly show repentance, and are forgiven by the successor or later listed as the heir in the will, the heir does not lose the right to inherit. Where the legatee has the conduct provided for in the first paragraph of this article, he or she loses the right to receive the bequest.
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Can my wife go to the notary?
If it is difficult to get this back, according to the bank's regulations, this belongs to the inheritance, and all heirs must agree.
The heirs include his parents, his children, and his spouse.
So if you have a passbook password, wait until it expires.
Take his ID card and go straight to get it, so you don't have to do anything else.
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If the money in the account is in the bank and the husband dies, then the wife has the right to go to the bank to get it back, but she also needs to bring some proof.
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Yes, but you need to have your husband's ID card and death certificate to get it.
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Of course, you can, but only if you need your husband's identity and death certificate.
After the death of the husband, the wife cannot inherit the entire estate, including real estate. The wife, children, and parents should be the first in order of heirs, and the second in order should be siblings, grandparents, and maternal grandparents.
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