Revocation of Wills Flashcards
How can a will be revoked?
(1) subsequent testamentary instrument; or
2) by physical act (with intent to revoke
Sufficient physical acts for revocation
- burning;
- tearing;
- cutting;
- cancelling;
- obliterating;
- other act of mutilation.
Express revocation
Express revocation language in will- “i hereby revoke all wills heretofore made by me.”
Revocation by implication
New will that did not expressly revoke prior will
to the extent possible, read the two instruments together
- 2nd will be treated as codicil & revokes will to the extent there are inconsistent provisions
- unless wills are wholly inconsistent, then the first will is revoked by implication
Revocation by physical act
Physical act must be:
(1) at the testator’s request;
(2) in the testator’s presence; AND
(3) witnessed by at least 2 witnesses.
Presumptions regarding revocation of wills- Will was last seen with T but is not found after death
Presumption: T revoked the will
Presumptions regarding Revocation- will was last seen with T and is found in a damaged condition after T’s death
Presumption- T is the one who did the physical act of revocation
Partial revocation by physical act
Not recognized in NY
Revival of a will
Revocation does not revive prior will
Only revived if:
(1) re-execution; OR
(2) Doctrine of “republication by codicil”: T validly executes a codicil to the first
basically, need a validly executed document to make a change
Dependent Relative Revocation- what is it?
DRR permits a revocation of a later Will to be disregarded
Dependent Relative Revocation- requirements
(1) T’s revocation must be premised upon a mistake of law (thinking that revocation of a later will validates a prior will)
(2) the disposition that results from disregarding the revocation of the later Will must come close to the dispositions T intended when he attempted to revive the earlier Will.
Argue both sides, but probably unlikely!
“Lost Wills” Statute- when does it apply
Used in 2 situations:
(1) DRR; and
(2) truly “lost” wills
Lost wills statute- what must proponent prove?
(1) the lost or later will was duly executed;
(2) the lost or later will was not revoked
- must overcome presumption of revocation; OR
- prove that the revocation should be disregarded under DRR
(3) the Will’s provisions are: “clearly and distinctly proven by each of at least two credible witnesses, or by a copy or draft of the Will proved to be true and complete.”