I love old stuff that just keeps on working. My rotary phones kept working throughout Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath, when power was out for weeks (so no cordless phone service) and cell service went dark. My Royal typewriters work fine (and there's a US vet-owned supplier of new...
Me too. Mostly a revolver guy. That newfangled design from 1911 is probably just a fad. :-D
The Kimbers are well regarded. I'm no connoisseur, but I've only heard good things.
Are you saying "it did not involve a motor vehicle whatsoever. Atty seems very confident that he CAN get all of this taken care of."?
If not, seek new counsel. :-)
Right. They can sue. They just might not be able to win. Anyone can sue, either pro se or with any lawyer who will take the case, possibly subject to Rule-11-type sanctions if the suit is found frivolous.
See post 27. The form generally says it binds your estate, you heirs and assigns. As midlife and some of the others have noted, these agreements sometimes hold up in court. The widow's case gets dismissed.