Decedents' Estates Flashcards
What are the two ways to divide property among a decedent’s children?
- Per capita at each generation: Where all cousins will be treated alike
- Per capita with representation: Where a child will simply take his parent’s share (modern per stirpes)
How do you determine share distribution under “per capita at each generation”?
- Find the first generation where there are issue living
- Give one share for each such living issue and one share for each person in that generation who predeceased the decedent but left issue surviving
- Combine the shares belonging to the deceased persons and distribute them equally at the next generational level (cousins are treated alike)
Look at graph in textbook
How do you determine share distribution under per capita with representation?
Look at chart in textbook
A decedent has no spouse or children. How do you determine heirship?
- *Consanguinity Method (civil law)**: Heirship is determined by degree of relationship: all persons of the same degree of relationship to the decedent take equal shares
- e.g., an uncle and a niece are in the third degree of consanguinity and would be heirs entitled to equal shares*
- *Parentelic Method (UPC)**: Descendants of the decedent’s parents take to the exclusion of descendants of the decedent’s grandparents
- e.g.,* a niece would be an heir but an uncle would not
True or False: Stepchildren are not considered true children for purposes of intestate succession
True.
A child includes adopted children, children born out of wedlock, and half-bloods.
What is an advancement?
This is an issue when the decedent dies without a will but gave a child a gift during her lifetime. The question is: Should the gift be deducted from what the child would inherit under the laws of intestate succession?
Should a gift to a child be deducted from what the child would inherit under the laws of intestate succession?
Common law: A lifetime transfer to an heir was presumptively treated as a down payment on the heir’s intestate share and thus is taken into account when computing the heir’s intestate share. At common law, this only applied to a gift to a child (e.g., not a sibling), but most states have broadened it to include any heir.
Majority law: A lifetime transfer is presumed to be a gift and is ignored in computing the heir’s intestate share unless there is evidence to show that the decedent intended to gift to be an advancement.
Ademption by Satisfaction Doctrine
Applies when there is a will.
Under UPC, a lifetime gift is not a prepayment unless:
- The will says so;
- The testator declares in a contemporaneous writing that the gift is to be deducted from the will; OR
- The devisee acknowledges in writing that the gift is in satisfaction of the bequest.
Components of a Valid Will
- In writing;
- Signed by the testator; AND
- Witnessed by two witnesses
(majority rule)
What is the general rule for who is a valid testator?
- 18 or older; AND
- Intends that the document is his will
(majority rule)
Define: Holographic Will
A holographic will is an unwitnessed will.
Valid if:
- Signed; AND
- The material portions are in the testator’s handwriting
Recognized by about half the states
***Mention this doctrine if you see an unwitnessed will on the MEE
Define: Dispensing Power
The UPC adopts the dispensing power under which a court can validate a will so long as there is clear and convincing evidence that the decedent intended the document to be her will.
Define: Incorporation by Reference
A writing that is not valid as a will may be incorporated by reference into a will if the will manifests an intent to incorporate the writing and the writing is identified with reasonable certainty. The writing must exist at the time the will is executed.
What are three ways to revoke a will?
- Revocation by physical act
- Dependent relative revocation
- Divorce
Revocation by Physical Act
E.g., by execution of a new will, cancellation, other writings on the will, etc.
This must be done with the intent to revoke the will. The testator or someone acting at the testator’s direction and in his “conscious presence” may revoke the will.