The Law of Succession: Death Testate or Intestate

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Copyright © 2004 by Prentice-Hall. All rights reserved. PowerPoint Slides to Accompany BUSINESS LAW E-Commerce and Digital Law International Law and Ethics.
Advertisements

Wills, Trusts and Estates
©2001 West Legal Studies in Business. All Rights Reserved. 1 Chapter 50: Wills, Trusts, and Elder Law.
Estate Planning Wills Wills Trusts Trusts Insurance Insurance Class 8.
Estate Planning Intestate Succession Intestate Succession Wills Wills Trusts Trusts Class 9.
 Child born or adopted after Testator executes the will. ▪ Note: Some states include children born before will execution who are omitted from the will.
Writing a Will.
Wills, Intestacy, and Estate Planning
 Persons related in ascending lineal line.  Parents  Grandparents  Great-grandparents  etc.
Documents: Wills Duke Legal Project. Purposes of a will Transfer property Name an executor to handle transfer of property Name a guardian for minor children.
11-1©2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. Chapter 11 Wills: Planning for the Distribution of Assets Wills provide for an orderly procedure for changing the.
 Gift fails (lapses) because beneficiary dies before testator.
Advance Directives & Wills
© 2004 West Legal Studies in Business A Division of Thomson Learning 1 Chapter 51 Wills, Trusts, and Elder Law Chapter 51 Wills, Trusts, and Elder Law.
Estate Planning Wills Wills Trusts Trusts Insurance Insurance Class 8.
Transfers at Death Wills February 14, 2008 Rachel Kirk.
 1. What law applies?  Personal property = intestate’s domicile at death  Real property = situs of real property.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Business Law, sixth edition, Henry R. Cheeseman Chapter 52: Wills, Trusts, and Living Wills Chapter 52: Wills, Trusts, and.
Business Law B-Personal Law Objective 5.02 Understand Retirement Planning, Death Benefits, Disability and Wills and Estate Planning. BB30 Business Law.
1 Chapter 50 Wills, Trusts, and Elder Law. 2 § 1: Wills Will provides for a Testamentary disposition of property. A will is the final declaration of how.
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice-Hall 1 WILLS, TRUSTS, AND ELDER LAW © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Prentice-Hall.
 Protects surviving spouse from disinheritance  Choice between:  Gifts in will, and  Statutory share  Replaces dower and curtesy.
BB30 Business Law 5.02 Summer 2013 Business Law
Business Law and the Regulation of Business Chapter 52: Trusts and Wills By Richard A. Mann & Barry S. Roberts.
25-1 Chapter 52 Wills, Trusts, and Estates. Learning Objectives  List and describe the requirements for making a valid will  Describe the different.
Wills, Trusts and Estates Chapter 19. What is a will? A legal expression, usually in writing, by which a person directs how their property is to be distributed.
Essentials Of Business Law Chapter 24 Wills, Intestacy, And Trusts McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Chapter 1 The Estate Plan and the Purpose and Need for a Will.
Chapter 1: Legal Ethics 1. © 2013 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use.
© 2007 West Legal Studies in Business, A Division of Thomson Learning Chapter 30 Insurance, Wills, and Trusts.
 A document that is signed during your lifetime that provides for the distribution of your property upon death  Each state has it’s own requirements.
Chapter 21.2: Estate Planning
Ownership and Transfer of Property Chapter 7 Tools & Techniques of Estate Planning Copyright 2011, The National Underwriter Company1 Ownership of Property.
Divorce. How Marriages End 0 Death – one of the two dies 0 Annulment – courts rules that the marriage was never effective 0 Divorce – Valid marriage has.
Wills, Trusts, and Living Wills
Wills Chapter 8 Tools & Techniques of Estate Planning Copyright 2011, The National Underwriter Company1 What Is a Will? Legal document Provide for disposition.
Wills, Trusts and Estates Chapter 14. Terminology Decedent – the one who dies Heirs – the persons who take property from the decedent when the decedent.
Business Law Chapter 40 Wills and Intestacy “Where There is a Will There is a Way”
Savings and Investments. Wills  Legal document that specifies how you want your property to be distributed after your death.  Intestate Die without.
Wills, Trusts and Estate Planning
Chapter 4 The Will. Wills, Trusts, and Estates Administration, 3e Herskowitz 2 © 2011, 2007, 2001 Pearson Higher Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ
Chapter 46 Wills and Trusts. 2  What are the basic requirements for executing a will?  How may a will be revoked?  What is the difference between a.
Chapter 38 Insurance, Wills and Trusts. 2  What is an insurable interest? When must an insurable interest exist?  Is an insurance broker the agent of.
26-1 Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Review for Midterm Exam Intestacy, Administration, Wills.
What is an insurable interest? When must an insurable interest exist—at the time the insurance policy is obtained, at the time the loss occurs, or both?
Copyright © 2009 by Pearson Prentice Hall. All rights reserved. PowerPoint Slides to Accompany CONTEMPORARY BUSINESS AND ONLINE COMMERCE LAW 6 th Edition.
Chapter 24 Wills, Estates, and Trusts
45.1 Law for Business, 15e by Ashcroft Chapter 45: Wills, Inheritances, and Trusts Law for Business, 15e, by Ashcroft, © 2005 West Legal Studies in Business,
Chapter 8 TRANSFERS AT DEATH. Definitions Tax Apportionment Clause Residual Estate Precatory Language (intent) Holographic Will (handwritten) Nuncupative.
BUSINESS LAW Objective 5.02: Understand Retirement Planning, Death Benefits, Disability and Wills and Estate Planning. BB30 Business Law 5.02Summer 2013.
Brown: Legal Terminology, 5 th ed. © 2008 Pearson Education, Upper Saddle River, NJ All Rights Reserved. Legal Terminology Fifth Edition by Gordon.
Wills and Trusts. Estate Planning  Estate Planning and Probate involves planning for the distribution of property after death and the mechanics of how.
Business Law B-Personal Law Objective 5.02 Understand Wills and Estate Planning. BB30 Business Law 5.02Summer 2013.
Unit 7: Wills, Estates, and Trusts. Wills Will provides for a Testamentary disposition of property. –A will is the final declaration of how a person desires.
Mid-Term Review Session
Wills, Trusts and Estate Planning
The Estate Plan and the Purpose and Need for a Will
Chapter 21.2: Estate Planning
Chapter 20 Wills, Trusts, and Estates
Law for Business, 15e by Ashcroft
The Last Will and Testament
Retirement and Wills Chapter 36.
Lapse.
Legal Consequences of Death
Wills and Trusts Chapter 50
Lapse.
TEXAS INTESTATE DISTRIBUTION OF REAL PROPERTY
BB30 Business Law 5.02 Summer 2013 Business Law
Pretermitted Children
Presentation transcript:

The Law of Succession: Death Testate or Intestate Chapter 3

Death Testate or Intestate Testacy Death with a valid will Intestacy Death without a valid will

Holographic Will A will written by the testator’s own hand Validity varies among states

Nuncupative Will An oral will Spoken in the presence of witnesses Generally not valid except in extreme circumstances

Statutory Will A fill-in-the-blank will created and authorized by state statute

Joint and Reciprocal Wills Joint Will A single document signed by spouses as their will Reciprocal Will Separate and identical wills made by spouses Reciprocal provisions in each will Agrees that neither spouse will change his/her will after the death of the other spouse

Living Will A document separate from a will; expresses a person’s wish to be allowed to die a natural death and not be kept alive by artificial means

Types of Gifts in a Will Specific Bequest or Legacy Specific Devise A gift of a particular item or class of personal property Specific Devise A gift of real property

Legacy Demonstrative General A gift of a specific monetary amount from proceeds of the sale of a particular item of property or from some identifiable fund For example: $10,000 from the sale of a house General A gift of a fixed amount of money from the general assets of the estate

Residuary Legacy or Devise A gift, either by legacy or devise, of all the testator’s property not otherwise disposed of by a will

Gifts Not Distributed by the Terms of the Will Ademption An intentional act by a testator, while alive, to cancel or revoke a gift or to deliver the gift to another or to the beneficiary Lapse Failure to distribute property as directed by a will because the beneficiary died before the testator died

Gifts Not Distributed by the Terms of a Will Abatement The proportional reduction of the legacies and devises in a will because of inadequate available funds from the assets of the testator's estate

Per Capita Distribution Division of an intestate’s estate by giving an equal share to the persons who are related to the decedent in the same degree of relationship Distribution without benefit of right of representation

Degree of Kindred The relationship between a decedent and his/her survivors that governs distribution of the estate first, to a surviving spouse and lineal descendants next, to lineal ascendants next, to collateral relatives who are lineal descendants of the decedent's parents next, to other next of kin, blood relatives of the decedent

Per Stirpes Distribution Distribution of property by class or by right of representation The estate is divided into as many equal shares as the decedent has children who are living or who are deceased, but have living descendants

Escheat The passage of an intestate’s property to the state when there are no surviving blood relatives or a spouse

Rights of Survivors Surviving Spouse Right of election Forced share Spouse’s choice of the statutory share or the share under the provisions of the will Forced share Share that spouse may choose pursuant to statute; alternative to choosing the share specified in the will

Divorce If granted after execution of the will, the effect of the divorce on the will is determined by state law Generally, divorce revokes the gift to the former spouse and not the will itself Gifts to a former spouse usually pass to the residuary beneficiary Legal separation does not change a spouse’s status

Marriage Subsequent marriage may revoke the entire will, depending on the state Compare to joint tenancy created prior to marriage

Premarital Agreement A contract between spouses before their marriage, whereby property rights are predetermined Usually used in a second marriage to protect children of the first marriage Compare to postnuptial agreement

Children Adopted children Nonmarital children Are treated the same as natural children Nonmarital children May inherit from nonmarried parents, but statutes vary among states

Children Pretermitted children Omitted children in a will The will must be clear in stating that the omission was intentional If a child is not mentioned in the will, it is assumed that the omission was inadvertent Parents may intentionally disinherit children, but may not disinherit a spouse