Intestacy Rules Flashcards

1
Q

What is the body of law governing NY wills?

A

Estates Powers and Trust Law (EPTL)

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2
Q

What is a residuary?

A

The balance of the decedent’s estate after all claims, taxes and particular bequests have been distributed
i..e. The “rest” of the estate

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3
Q

When do the the rules of intestacy apply under the EPTL?

A

They apply when…

1) Decedent left no will OR did not properly execute it;
2) The Will does not make a COMPLETE distribution of the estate (b/c of poor drafting), resulting in partial intestacy; OR 3) A distributee successfully challenges the Will, and the Will is DENIED probate

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4
Q

What is the order of priority for appointment as adminsitrator (in intestacy)?

A
  1. Surviving SPOUSE;
  2. CHILDREN;
  3. GRANDCHILDREN;
  4. FATHER or MOTHER;
  5. BROTHER or SISTER;
  6. Any other DISTRIBUTEES
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5
Q

What is the rule when a decedent is survived by a spouse and NO children?

A

The surviving spouse takes the WHOLE estate

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6
Q

What is the rule when the decedent is ONLY survived by his children?

A

If NO child has predeceased the decedent, the estate passes to the children in EQUAL shares

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7
Q

What is the rule when a decedent is survived by a spouse AND children (his issue)?

A

1) The surviving spouse: takes $50k + 1/2 of the RESIDUARY
2) The issue (from ALL marriages, if applicable): takes the left over residuary divided EQUALLY,

UNLESS the estate is worthless than $50k issue would then take NOTHING (i.e. everything goes to surviving spouse)

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8
Q

What is the rule when the decedent is survived by his children AND issue of PREDECEASED children?

A

The estate passes to(i)the LIVING children;AND(ii) the issue of the deceased children “by representation” (i.e. Per Capita Distribution)

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9
Q

How does property pass “by representation” (or per capita distribution)?

A

This is the DEFAULT distribution in NY for BOTH intestacy AND will ———–

STEP 1: The property is divided into AS MANY SHARES as there are issue (dead or alive) at the first generation level WHERE THERE ARE survivors

STEP 2: All LIVING issue at the FIRST generational level take one share EACH

STEP 3: The shares of the DECEASED issue (only) at the FIRST generational level are COMBINED and divided EQUALLY among THEIR issue at the NEXT generational level

NOTE: the issue of the children who TOOK a share DO NOT get a distribution at this 2d level

NOTE: SPOUSES of issue do not get ANYTHING (not an intestate distributee)

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10
Q

What is the rule if the decedent is survived by NEITHER a spouse NOR an issue?

A

If no spouse or issue, the distribution is….

**1) to the SURVIVING PARENT(S) (If not survived by parents) ↓ **2) to the ISSUE of the PARENTS (i.e. siblings), who take per capita at each generation (If not survived by issue of parents) ↓
3) 1/2 to MATERNAL GRANDPARENT(S) (OR their issue, who take per capita at each generation) PLUS1/2 to PATERNAL GRANDPARENTS (OR their issue, who take per capita at each generation) NOTE: if one side (maternal or paternal) is wiped out, 100% goes to OTHER SIDE (OR their issue, who take per capita at each generation)
NOTE: if only GRANDCHILDREN left on either side, then they take in EQUAL shares (If not survived by grandparents OR their issue) ↓ 4) If the nearest kin are GREAT GREAT GRANDCHILDREN OF THE GRANDPARENTS (i.e. no great grandchildren), the estate reverts back to NY State

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11
Q

How does property pass by “per stirpes” distribution?

A

It’s where the issue of a PREDECEASED child takes the share that the predeceased child would have taken

In NY, the DEFAULT rule is “per capita” distribution for predeceased children for BOTH intestacy AND will

NOTE: a will can OVERRIDE and change the default distribution (“per capita”) to “per stirpes”

FUN FACT: “Per capita” distribution results in the SAME distribution as “per stirpes” if there is ONLY ONE person in the first generation that PREDECEASED the decedant

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12
Q

What are the inheritance rights of ADOPTED children?

A

When adopted by… NEW family→adopted child AND his issue have FULL inheritance rights from the ADOPTING family (AND vice versa)

NOTE: The adopted child has NO inheritance rights from the BIRTH PARENTS or other members of the BIRTH FAMILY

SPOUSE of birth parent → the child AND that child’s issue can inhereit from (i) the adopting PARENT; (ii) the BIRTH parent; AND (iii) the DECEASED parent’s family
NOTE: if child dies, the non-custodial parent’s family CANNOT inherit (i.e. ONE WAY STREET)

RELATIVE→ the child inherits under the BIRTH relationship ONLY (i.e. that line is not “extinguished”), UNLESS the decedent was the adopting parent, then the child inherits under the ADOPTIVE relationship

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13
Q

What are the inheritance rights of non-marital children?

A

Depends on whether decedent is MOTHER or FATHER…

From MOTHER: a nonmarital child has FULL inheritance rights from his MOTHER and his MOTHER’S family

From FATHER: inheritance ONLY IF paternity is established by…

DURING “FATHER’S” LIFE

1) The father marries the MOTHER after the child’s birth (i.e. “legitimation by marriage”); OR
2) An order of filiation in a paternity suit is entered adjudicating the the man to be the child’s father; OR
3) The father files a witnessed and acknowledged (before a notary public) AFFIDAVIT of paternity w/ the Putative Father Registry; OR

BEFORE OR AFTER THE “FATHER’S” DEATH
4) Paternity is established by clear and convincing evidence A DNA genetic marker test Open & notoriously acknowledging child as his own (e.g. name on birth certificate) Visitation, participation, gifts to child (NOT child support alone)

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14
Q

What 6circumstances DISQUALIFY a surviving spouse from taking an intestate share?

A

D-I-S-M-AL-S

1) Divorce: a final DECREE of divorce or annulment recognized as valid under NY law
2) Invalid divorce: procured by SURVIVING spouse

3) Separation decree: a final DECREE of separation was rendered against the SURVIVING spouse
NOTE: a separation AGMT does NOT result in disqualification UNLESS there is specific language in the agmt waiving the surviving spouse’s right under EPTL

4) Marriage is VOID (incestuous; bigamoous; fraud)
5) Abandonment/Lack of support: the SURVIVING spouse abandoned or refused to support the dead spouse
6) Slayer spouse:if the spouse KILLS the decedent, then she CANNOT inherit NOTE: If there was a joint tenancy, the bad surviving spouse could ONLY get what she put in

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15
Q

What is the rule when the decedent is survived by a DISQUALIFIED spouse?

A

Rule = we assume the SURVIVING spouse PREDECEASED the decedent→we then drop their share to the children, etc

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16
Q

What is the rule for an “advancement” in NY?

A

Advancement → at common law, an inter vivos (lifetime) gift was PRESUMPTIVELY an advance pmt of a distributee’s share

This rule hase been REJECTED by statute in NY

In NY, there is NO advancement UNLESS proven by…
1) a CONTEMPORANEOUS writing made at the time of the gift; AND 2) the writing is SIGNED by the DONOR or DONEE

If there IS a VALID advancement: (i) the advanced property is ADDED with the rest of the decedent’s estate;

(ii) that total is then DIVIDED by the number of sharing distributees; AND
(iii) the share for distribute w/ the advancement is REDUCED by the value of the advancement NOTE: if advancement is larger than intestate share, she DOES NOT have to return the difference

17
Q

What is the rule when a distributee disclaims property in intestacy?

A

The interest in the decedent’s estate can be renounced in whole or in part ↓

Rule: the person who disclaims is considered to have PREDECEASED the decedent

The interest THEN drops to the disclaiming distributee’s issue

NOTE: if this RULE, with respect to per capita distribution, would cause the distribution to “skip” a generation (where the distributees would share equally), THEN it is IGNORED (i.e. we assume the disclaiming distributee dies ONE DAY later than the decedent)

18
Q

What 4 steps must a distributee take to properly “disclaim”?

A

A valid disclaimer must be:

1) In a SIGNED and ACKNOWELDGED (notary public) WRITING;
2) Accompanied by an AFFIDAVIT stating no consideration was received for disclaiming;
3) Must be IRREVOCABLE; AND 4) Filed with the Surrogate’s Ct w/in 9 MONTHS after date of death

NOTE: distributee cannot disclaim to (i) avoid a FEDERAL TAX lien; OR (ii) remain eligible for Medicaid/Medicare