Not an FFL nor did I stay at a Holiday Inn Express.
But, as an actively practicing attorney, I can tell you my experience gleaned over the last 20 years. In Kansas, we have a statute that allows for a handwritten list to be kept with the will, to transfer tangible personal property after death. If there are firearms on the list and they don't turn up, the Executor has a fiduciary duty to discover what happened to them. If they don't end up with the named beneficiary, then the Executor is required to pursue recovery if possible. No FFL is required for transfer to an individual, unless we have an estate sale, and the firearms are sold in that fashion.
Complete thread:
- ? for you FFL holders/dealers -
Cherokee,
2012-02-25, 07:37
- Depends on your state - Slow Hand, 2012-02-25, 11:38
- I would recommend that you handle this yourself -
bj,
2012-02-25, 19:08
- "I would recommend that you handle this yourself" DITTOS!!!! - Hobie, 2012-02-25, 20:07
- I would recommend that you handle this yourself - Norm, 2012-02-27, 08:41
- Thanks for the comments & cautions, I am actively using - Cherokee, 2012-02-26, 19:11
- Not an FFL nor did I stay at a Holiday Inn Express. -
Wildcat,
2012-02-27, 18:22
- A codicil? -
Hobie,
2012-02-28, 14:22
- A codicil? -
Wildcat,
2012-02-28, 17:28
- Thank you. - Hobie, 2012-03-01, 15:32
- A codicil? -
Wildcat,
2012-02-28, 17:28
- A codicil? -
Hobie,
2012-02-28, 14:22