Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Inheritance law depends on the state but consummation of the marriage isn’t required to be “married” but it can be terms for an annulment vs a divorce.
In Virginia, when a husband and wife die together in an accident, the husband is deemed to die first, then the wife second. So if this had happened in Virginia, and they had both died intestate (without a will), the husband dies and leaves his estate to his wife who then dies and leaves the estate to her heirs. Technically under that scenario the husband’s family receives nothing, and if the wife had no children her parents get everything.
They were both still in college, I doubt either of them has any sort of estate worth settling.
Anonymous wrote:Inheritance law depends on the state but consummation of the marriage isn’t required to be “married” but it can be terms for an annulment vs a divorce.
In Virginia, when a husband and wife die together in an accident, the husband is deemed to die first, then the wife second. So if this had happened in Virginia, and they had both died intestate (without a will), the husband dies and leaves his estate to his wife who then dies and leaves the estate to her heirs. Technically under that scenario the husband’s family receives nothing, and if the wife had no children her parents get everything.
Anonymous wrote:This was no accident or pilot error though it may be one or the other to officially cover up. Big Daddy, the groom's father, was involved with some blood diamond people. Just saying.
You deal with the devil and the devil expects payment.
Anonymous wrote:This was no accident or pilot error though it may be one or the other to officially cover up. Big Daddy, the groom's father, was involved with some blood diamond people. Just saying.
You deal with the devil and the devil expects payment.
Anonymous wrote:I remember something about you have to consumate the marriage to make it legal. In the recent case of the newlyweds who died after the ceremony on a helicopter ride, would they be legally married? This could impact who inherits their property.
Just a curiosity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This was no accident or pilot error though it may be one or the other to officially cover up. Big Daddy, the groom's father, was involved with some blood diamond people. Just saying.
You deal with the devil and the devil expects payment.
I was wondering how the family afforded two private helicopters and obviously a very lavish wedding on private land that includes a private family burial ground. I just assumed because the groom (and oldest son) was an agricultural major that they were a ranching family.
Curious that this isn't the case.
Anonymous wrote:This was no accident or pilot error though it may be one or the other to officially cover up. Big Daddy, the groom's father, was involved with some blood diamond people. Just saying.
You deal with the devil and the devil expects payment.