Florida Wills Flashcards
Definitions > Intestate v. Testate
Testate: Died with a valid will
Intestate: Died without a will or an invalid will
Definitions >
1) Lineal Heirs (lineal ascendants + lineal descendants)
2) Collateral Heirs
Lineal Heirs: A person that stems from one another in a general line that includes the descendants.
Lineal ascendants: Father, mother, grandparents
Lineal descendants: Children, grandchildren, etc.
Collateral Heirs: Stem not from one another but from a common ancestor.
examples: siblings, cousins, aunts, uncles
Per Stirpes Distribution
Florida is a strict per stirpes jurisdiction.
Stirpital shares are always determined at the first generational level, even if there are no living takers at that level. Each branch of the family will receive an equal share, even if the first person in the branch is deceased.
* Start with generation immediately following the deceased person and split estate equal – dead or alive.
* If descendant taker is dead, their stirpital share passes down to their descendants equally.
per stirpes – “by the roots” of the family tree
Intestate Succession
Intestate means that the decedent did not have a will. However, intestate succession laws also apply to property that was not properly devised or not devised at all in a will.
Example:
* D owns a house and a boat.
* D’s will validly devises the house in his will but does not mention the boat
* The boat passes to D’s heirs by intestate succession.
Intestate Succession > Spouse’s share (of the estate)
Whenever there is intestate succession, the first question should always be: What does the surviving spouse get?
Only two possible answers: ALL or HALF –(one big happy family concept)
The surviving spouse takes it ALL if:
* There are no descendants of the decedent, or
* There are descendants of the decedent, and those descendants are all descendants of the surviving spouse, and surviving spouse does not have any other descendants.
The surviving spouse takes HALF if:
* Decedent is survived by 1 or more descendants, any of which is not a descendant of the surviving spouse, or
* Decedent is survived by descendants, all of whom are also descendants of the surviving spouse, but the surviving spouse has other descendants that are not descendants of the decedent.
Intestate Succession > Intestate Share of Other (Non-Spouse) Heirs
When the surviving spouse gets half or nothing, the portion of the estate that does not pass to the surviving spouse is distributed to the decedents heirs in the following order:
Descendants per stirpes
Parents - if no descendants, to the parents in equal shares. If only one surviving parent, then all to the one surviving parent
Siblings and their descendants - if no descendants or parents, then to siblings, per stirpes. (their descendants too)
Grandparents and their descendants - If no descendants, parents, siblings, or descendants of siblings, then estate is divided into two and passes to grandparents and their descendants.
Kindered of last deceased Spouse - If no grandparents or descendants of grandparents, then the whole of the property shall go to the kindred of the last deceased spouse of the decedent as if the deceased spouse had survived the decedent and then died intestate entitled to the estate.
If none of the above, property escheats to the state
Remember that parents and collateral kin (brithers, sistersm aunts, uncles) never inherit in the intestate decedent is survived by children or more remote descendants (grandchildren, great grandchildren)
Intestate Succession > Adopted Children
For purposes of intestate succession:
* adopted children are treated the same as natural born child of the adopting parents.
* They are entitled to inherit from the adopting parents just like a natural child.
* an adopted child cannot inherit from their natural parents. That relationship is cut off (severed) when the child is adopted
Intestate Succession > Half-Bloods
Half-bloods are brothers and sisters who share only 1 parent in common
Rule: When intestate property descends to collateral heirs, like brothers and sisters, the collateral heirs that are half-bloods will take half as much as whole bloods.
[D]— A (whole) —B (whole) — C (half)
A: 2 parents in common w/ D
B: 2 parents in common w/ D
C: 1 parent in common w/ D
—————————————
5 total (denominator)
distribution:
A – 2/5
B – 2/5
C – 1/5
numerator is the number of parents in common
Uniform Simultaneous Death Act
Rule: Property owner is deemed/presumed to have survived the beneficiary when there is insufficient evidence to establish that they died other than simultaneously
* The beneficiary is presumed to have died first.
* Applies in ALL contexts: via will, intestacy, joint tenancy with rights of survivorship, a life insurance contract, etc.
3 order-of-death possibilities:
a) Property owner died first;
* Beneficiary takes property.
* Does not matter how short the survival period. Need only a microsecond to avoid applying the USDA.
b) Beneficiary died first;
* Beneficiary does not take property.
* If decedent died intestate, the beneficiary’s descendants may take his place. If decedent died testate, the antilapse statute might apply.
* The anti-lapse statute provides that a gift to a predeceased beneficiary will not lapse but will instead go to the beneficiary’s surviving descendants per stirpes
c) Two died simultaneously.
* The beneficiary is presumed to have died first when there is insufficient evidence to establish that they died other than simultaneously.
FL Simultaneous death statute applies in 4 situations:
1) Applies whenever title to property, or its devolution, depends on the order of death.
* I.e. a testamentary devise.
2) If one person provides that 2 or more beneficiaries will take successive interests by survivorship. IF there is insufficient evidence that beneficiaries did not die simultaneously, the property is divided into equal parts based on the number of successive beneficiaries.
* Each part is distributed to the person that would take if the particular beneficiary had been the survivor.
3) Survivorship tenancies: JTWROS & tenancy by the entirety
* If deaths are treated as simultaneous, property is divided equally by the number of tenants and administered as such.
* Rule doesn’t apply to tenancies in common (b/c each tenant’s interest passed by will or intestacy).
4) Life or accident insurance policies.
* If deaths are deemed to be simultaneous, insured is treated as surviving the beneficiary.
Joint tenancy with right of survivorship between A, B, C.
* If simultaneous death between A and B – C takes all.
* If all die simultaneously, each person’s beneficiaries takes that persons share.
Slayer Statute
A person that unlawfully and intentionally kills or participates in procuring the death of a decedent is not entitled to any benefits under the decedents will or the probate code.
* The estate passes as though the killer had predeceased the decedent.
* You don’t need a murder conviction. A conviction for murder is conclusive proof, but without it, you just need to prove by the greater weight of the evidence.
* Self-Defense killing is not unlawful.
However, lineal descendants of the killer are not prohibited from taking under the statue.
Disclaimer of Interests
A disclaimer is when a beneficiary of a decedent’s property does not wish to receive the property. This is usually done for tax purposes.
Rule: A disclaimer must be in writing.
Rule: No Florida time limit for disclaimer
* but right to disclaim can be waived by accepting or using property
Rule: 9 month time limit to disclaim for FEDERAL gift tax purposes
* within nine months of the decedents death.
Advancement of Share
An advancement is a gift made to a next of kin with the intent that the gift is an advance of property to be received from the decedents estate.
* An inheritance given EARLY (early distribution of what you would get as inheritance from your parents). NOT A GIFT!
Rule: 2 methods for establishing a transfer is an advancement:
* 1) Decedent delivered a writing stating that the transfer is an early inheritance or to be charged against heir’s inheritance, or
- 2) The heir may acknowledge in writing that he received his early inheritance.
Rule: the advancement is valued as of the date of the gift
Problem: Father has a son and a daughter. Father has 200k. Father gives 20k to daughter as an advancement. The father dies the next day. There is now 180k in the estate.
* Normally, if the father dies intestate, we would distribute half and half to each child. So each child would receive 90k.
* However, with advancement we proceed as follows. The 20k that was lent to the daughter gets put in a hotchpot (on paper, we don’t actually ask her the money back), and the estate is back to having $200,000. Therefore, each child should get $100,000.
* And because Daughter already received 20k, we reduce it from the 100k that she was supposed to receive and she gets 80k and her brother receives 100k.
* Don’t forget that the father has to give: (1) A writing saying this is an advancement or (2) daughter can acknowledge in writing as to the advancement.
Wills
A will is a legal instrument that is:
* Executed with certain formalities
* Testamentary in nature
* Revocable during the lifetime of the maker
* Operative only upon the testators death
Wills > Codicil
A codicil is a supplement/amendment to a will.
A codicil has the same formalities as required by a will
* treated just like a will
Wills > Intent
In order for a will to be valid, the testator must have intended the instrument to be his or her will.
* This is usually shown on the face of the will itself, ex: “I, John doe, do hereby declare this instrument to be my last Will.” This is, however, a rebuttable presumption of intent. (ex: coercion)