Submit your claim directly to the probate court and serve a copy on the personal representative. If you file a formal claim and the personal representative rejects it, you can file suit against the estate within three months of the rejection.
(c) If notice was not provided under this chapter or chapter 11.42 RCW, the creditor must present the claim within twenty-four months after the decedent's date of death.
RCW 11.40. 140 provides for strict provisions if you are a creditor of Decedent and wish to present a Creditor's Claim against the estate yourself: You must prepare, file, and serve a written Creditor's Claim, and. You must set a noticed hearing and have the Court determine whether your claim should be allowed.
Filing a claim against an estate is a fairly simple process: In the claim, you'll state under oath that the debt is owed and provide details on the amount of the debt and any payments the decedent made. If you have written documentation, you can attach it to your claim.
Ing to Washington state executor requirements, an executor has no exact timeframe to settle an estate. It can take several months and up to a year for an estate to pass through probate.
RCW 11.40. 140 provides for strict provisions if you are a creditor of Decedent and wish to present a Creditor's Claim against the estate yourself: You must prepare, file, and serve a written Creditor's Claim, and. You must set a noticed hearing and have the Court determine whether your claim should be allowed.
RCW 11.40. 140 provides for strict provisions if you are a creditor of Decedent and wish to present a Creditor's Claim against the estate yourself: You must prepare, file, and serve a written Creditor's Claim, and. You must set a noticed hearing and have the Court determine whether your claim should be allowed.
Claims against decedent—Time limits. (c) If notice was not provided under this chapter or chapter 11.42 RCW, the creditor must present the claim within twenty-four months after the decedent's date of death. (2) An otherwise applicable statute of limitations applies without regard to the tolling provisions of RCW 4.16.
(c) If notice was not provided under this chapter or chapter 11.42 RCW, the creditor must present the claim within twenty-four months after the decedent's date of death.
RCW 11.40. 140 provides for strict provisions if you are a creditor of Decedent and wish to present a Creditor's Claim against the estate yourself: You must prepare, file, and serve a written Creditor's Claim, and. You must set a noticed hearing and have the Court determine whether your claim should be allowed.