But it is not necessarily his money, it could well be in her estate and pays off the mortgage as it is equally a liability of her estate as it is Crabbies liability (joint and several liability), the OR doesn't have any call on the late Mrs Crabs estate, only any assets that belong to Crabbie. It all depends on the terms under which the insurance policy(s) were written.aesmith wrote: ↑Fri Sep 13, 2019 12:43 pmSurely the same point would apply, the OR should have first call on any payout, and will decide where the money goes. So question, would an insurance company know someone was bankrupt and that the payment should go to their trustee?Footloose52 wrote: ↑Fri Sep 13, 2019 12:22 pmVery much so - there will have been the endowment policy and possibly level term assurance so that on the death of one party the mortgage would be repaid. He's possibly been dug out of a hole on his house.
Wouldn't the OR want a slice of the action though. Mind you there might be enough of a surplus to keep the OR off his back on the former matrimonial home ...
Crabbie may well, depending on the terms of her will, ultimately inherit her assets and/or any cash which is where the OR will step in. Once her estate is wound up the house is his, free and clear of any charge. Could the OR conceivably go after the house at that point?