California Wills Flashcards
Substituted Judgment
allowing a conservator to execute a will for an incompetent person
- -The conservator must petition a court for approval of the will.
- -Notice must be given to the conservatee’s presumptive heirs, and beneficiaries under a prior will.
- -The court will consider (among other factors):
- the wishes of the conservatee;
- the likelihood that the conservatee would take the proposed action if the conservatee were competent to do so;
- any known estate plan of the conservatee;
- the conservatee’s past gifting practices;
- the relationship between the conservatee and the prospective donees;
- the standard of living of each prospective donee; and
- changes in tax laws that might have motivated the conservatee to alter her estate plan.
Mental Capacity
Burden of Proof
-California puts the burden of proof on the will contestant.
Insane Delusion
- -The contestant must show that
- (1) the testator labored under an insane delusion
-
If there is any factual basis for the delusion, it is not insane.
- (minority approach)
-
If there is any factual basis for the delusion, it is not insane.
- (2) the will (or some part) was a product of the insane delusion.
- The contestant must show that the insane delusion materially affected or influenced the will’s provisions.
- (majority approach)
- The contestant must show that the insane delusion materially affected or influenced the will’s provisions.
- (1) the testator labored under an insane delusion
No Contest Clauses
- -California, similar to a majority of states, will enforce a no-contest clause if the will contest lacks probable cause.
- -California defines probable cause typically:
- “Probable cause exists if, at the time of filing a contest, the facts known to the contestant would cause a reasonable person to believe that there is a reasonable likelihood that the requested relief will be granted after an opportunity for further investigation or discovery.”
- -California defines probable cause typically:
Disqualified Transferees
-Among the disqualified transferees are
- (1) the drafter of the will (does not have to be a lawyer),
- (2) a person who has a fiduciary relationship to the donor (such as a conservator or trustee) AND who transcribes the will or “caused it to be transcribed,”
- direct involvement in transcription, such as directing another person to transcribe the document
- (3) a care custodian of a dependent adult who is the transferor.
Exceptions to disqualified transferees
- (1) the donor is related by blood or marriage within four degrees (or domestic partnership or cohabits with the donee) to the donee;
- (2) or the will is reviewed by an independent attorney who
- (i) counsels the donor about the nature of the gift,
- (ii) attempts to determine if the gift is the product of fraud, duress, or undue influence, and
- (iii) signs a certificate certifying his independent review.
- (3) or a court determines that the donee has shown by clear and convincing evidence that the gift was not the product of fraud, duress, or undue influence.
- This third exception does not apply to a drafter.
In California, you can prove Undue Influence by the following 2 approaches
(A) a presumption of undue influence approach or
(B) an indicia of undue influence approach.
Notice, there is a great deal of overlap between the two. (If you can prove one, you can probably prove the other.) Courts tend to focus on the presumption approach.
Presumption of Undue Influence test
IF -
- (1) a confidential relationship exists between the decedent and the beneficiary
- (2) the beneficiary actively participated in procuring the execution of the will, and
- (3) the beneficiary unduly profits from the will (= unnatural),
THEN – a presumption of undue influence arises and the beneficiary has the burden to show that the will was freely made.
Indicia of Undue Influence test
-The court looks at several nonexclusive factors:
- (1) unnatural disposition
- (2) is there a variance between the terms of the will and the expressed intentions of the testator;
- (3) Opportunity to exert influence
- (4) Susceptibility of the testator
- (5) Was the beneficiary active in procuring the execution of the will
These factors must be considered in combination.
Choice of Law
-California provides that a will is valid if its execution complies with
- California law OR
- complies with the law at the time of execution where the will is executed OR
- complies with the law where the testator is domiciled, has a residence or is a national at the time of execution or at the time of death.
Witnessing a Will
-In addition to requiring a writing and the testator’s signature, California has an unusual witnessing requirement:
- “The will shall be witnessed by being signed by at least two persons each of whom
- (1) being present at the same time, witnessed either the signing of the will or the testator’s acknowledgement of the signature or of the will and
- (2) understand that the instrument they sign is the testator’s will.”
-California also requires that the witnesses must sign before death of the testator.
Interested Witnesses
There is a presumption that the interested witness procured the gift by duress, fraud, or undue influence.
- If he fails to overcome that presumption, he takes a portion that does not exceed intestacy
Harmless Error
-Cal. Prob. Code 6110(c)(2) provides that
- if a will is not executed with the formalities prescribed in the code, “the will shall be treated as if it was executed in compliance if the proponent of the will establishes by clear and convincing evidence that, at the time the testator signed the will, the testator intended the will to constitute the testator’s will.”
- Thus, California’s harmless error rule requires a writing and a signature; it is largely limited to attestation errors.
Holographic wills
- Valid if the signature and the material provisions are in the handwriting of the testator.
- intent: “any statement of testamentary intent contained in a holographic will may be set forth either in the testator’s own handwriting or as part of a commercially printed form will
- extrinsic evidence: admissible to determine whether a document constitutes a will … or to determine the meaning of a will or a portion of a will if the meaning is unclear
- No date: inconsistent portions with another will are not valid. If testamentary capacity is in question, will is not valid unless capacity can be established
Revocation
- If
- the testator’s will was last in the testator’s possession,
- the testator was competent until death, and
- neither the will nor a duplicate original of the will can be found after the testator’s death,
- it is presumed that the testator destroyed the will with intent to revoke it.”
So, in California, if a duplicate can be found, - even if the duplicate was in someone else’s possession - the presumption does not arise.
Lost Will
-In most states, a lost will, not revoked in compliance with applicable formalities, can be probated if its contents can be proved by clear and convincing evidence. California requires only that the terms of the lost will be proved by a preponderance of the evidence.
Cancellation
-Traditionally, words or marks of revocation (cancellation) must touch the words of the will. However, California’s probate code does not expressly require that cancellation touch the words of the will. There are no California cases that directly address the issue.
Revival of Revoked wills
- Generally, upon revocation of Will #2, Will #1 is revived if T so intends.
- Details:
- -If T revokes Will 2 by physical act, Will 1 stays revoked (in part or completely) “UNLESS it is evident that the testator intended the first will to take effect as executed.”
- -If T revokes Will 2 by a third Will, Will 1 stays revoked (in part or completely) “except to the extent it appears from the terms of the third will that the testator intended the first will to take effect.”