We need an expert to look at this. Too many questions. It says no claims against the estate which I think mortgage and credit cards would apply there. It shows no insurance and I would be surprised if he had cashed out his insurance but maybe since he is not the beneficiary it's not his asset. And why does nothing show in cash and checking account? It doesn't show $0 like other listings, it is blank. Was it redacted?
Agreed! Any probate attorney around

?
Just a couple of things I found:
I need to look into how it works in Texas, but in Michigan, "You must list all real property and personal property with the value of each. For decedents who died after March 28, 2013,
the value of real property is the net value. If there is a mortgage or other lien on the property, the property’s value will be the market value minus the mortgage or other lien amount. For decedents who died before March 28, 2013, the mortgage or lien is not subtracted from the market value of the home." (BBM)
https://michiganlegalhelp.org/self-h...tate-processes
So, could the value ($118,325.00) be the difference between the market value of the property and the current mortgage balance?
As for life insurance, you may be correct about it not being his asset:
"The Difference between Probate and Non-Probate Assets
While a Will is important for directing the disposition of a Decedent’s assets, it does not control the disposition of all
assets held by the deceased. Assets that pass by a Will are probate assets. But there are non-probate assets too. Non-probate assets are assets that disposition is not controlled by the Decedent’s Will or estate. Non-probate assets include, but are not limited to:
1) Joint accounts with rights of survivorship;
2)
Assets with designated beneficiaries, including retirement accounts, IRAs and life insurance policies;
3) Assets owned with a pay-on-death (P.O.D.) designation;
4) Assets owned with a transfer-on-death (T.O.D.) designation;
5) Real property owned as Tenants by the Entirety; and
6) Assets owned by the Trustee of a Decedent’s Revocable Trust.
Probate assets include those assets titled in the Decedent’s name only with no beneficiary designation or rights of survivorship, the Decedent’s portion of assets owned as tenants-in-common and the assets owned as joint tenants without rights of survivorship.
Many times, a surviving spouse opts not to probate the estate of the deceased spouse when all or most of the Decedent’s assets pass to the surviving spouse outside of the probate process.
However, community property residences are generally owned as tenants-in-common; thus, if the surviving spouse later attempts to sell the home, some form of probate or estate administration must be initiated to transfer full title on the house into the surviving spouse’s name." (BBM)
http://www.tyla.org/tyla/assets/File/38668TexasProbatePassportWebReady.pdf
As far as cash and bank accounts (or the lack thereof), the "Inventory ..." document reads:
"... Inventory and Appraisement of all personal property and of all real property ... together with a List of Claims ... as of the date of death," which it lists as May 26, 2017.
MC went missing on March 10th. Could BC have used whatever funds they had at the time of his disappearance to pay off debts?