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Ugh, what a morning


Yesterday was a bit rough, some 4+ hours dealing with the DMV and St Louis County to get the title to my husband's car, he died with neither a will nor a TOD on the car, but thankfully I'd found an estate lawyer's blog with instructions on how to claim it under Missouri's exempt property law, which might be a bit old...

Yeah, that list is fun.

Any how, fell asleep at an earlier time than normal, and slept hard, woke up a couple times like usual, but unlike usual I didn't stay up, usually I do because why not, but not this time. I did finally wake up at 5, and decide to stay up, though I needed some Tylenol because my everything hurt, especially my back. Now I'm just feeling kinda meh, but luckily I don't have much to do today, few things I want to get done today, but no pressure, just little odd things around the house, part of the clean up.

#life #missouri #mo #STL #stlouis

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The image shows a legal document page from a book or online resource, specifically from Title XXXI Trusts and Estates of Decedents and Persons Under Disability, Chapter 474. The page is titled "474.250 Exempt property of surviving spouse or minor children." The text explains that the surviving spouse or unmarried minor children of a decedent are entitled to certain property of the estate without regard to its value, including the family bible, books, a motor vehicle, household and kitchen furniture, appliances, utensils, and implements. The property is to be divided equally among the surviving spouse and unmarried minor children. The effective date of this law is May 23, 1996, as indicated by the footnote. The text is formatted with a header, a main body, and a footer, with the effective date highlighted in red. The footer includes a link to bookmark the section.

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