Wills Flashcards
Intestate Succession
- Society’s development of set of rules which dictate where property goes based on degree of relationship
Will
- No constitutional right
- Will substitute: property that has right of survivorship or contract rights which do not go through probate and get distributed first
Nonprobate Property: Separate Property
- Property that does not pass through probate and is not governed by will or intestate succession
- Types:
. Intervivos outright or living trusts
. Future Interests: if decedent owned LE, property passes to remainder beneficiaries
. Co-ownership
1) Tenancy in common: will pass through decedent’s estate
2) Joint Tenancy: passes to surviving joint tenant
. Pay on Death Designations
. Contracts: life insurance, retirement plans, annuities
Intestate Law Types of Property
1) Marital Property: owned ½ by each spouse regardless of who earned or how titled
2) Separate Property: beneficiary, trust, gifts, or property acquired before 1986
3) Individual Property: if owned prior to marriage
Succession Rights
- Personal: law of the decedent’s domicile at death
- Real Property: law of the situs
Intestate With Spouse: No Descendants
Only spousal descendants
Non-Spousal Descendants
- Spouse, No Descendants survive: spouse takes all
- Spouse, with only spousal descendants: the spouse takes all
- Spouse, Non-spousal descendants: Marital property: descendants receive all of the intestate’s interest in marital half, and the spouse takes half; tenancy in common: their half goes to their decedents; Balance of property: surviving spouse and descendants both receive ½
Intestate Per Stirpes
Surviving Spouse (if one)=50%
Create 1 share for each living or predeceased w/children=equal shares
If predeceased=split equal shares of parent’s share-unequal to grandchildren
Intestate Succession Wisconsin
- Spouse &/or Decescendants
- Parents
- Siblings or their descendants
- Grandaparents
- Escheat to state
Adoptive Rights
- Adopted children are treated the same as the natural children of the adopting parents
- Adoptive parents inherit from and through the adopted child
- Biological Parents: do not inherit from or through the adopted child except where the biological marries an adoptive or close relative adopted
Nonmarital Children
- Stepchildren & foster: no inheritance rights unless adopted
- Nonmarital: always inherit from their mother, and in WI can inherit from their father if either: 1) father was adjudicated to be the father, 2) admitted he was the father in open court, 3) acknowledged him to be the father in signed writing
- Half-blooded Heirs: Wisconsin abolished all distinctions and are treated as whole bloods
- Posthumous Heirs: child conceived before death of a parent but born after treated as living at death
- Murder: cannot collect, treated as they predeceased the intestate
Advancement Requirements
- Irrevocable gift intended by the donor as prepayment of an inheritance, gift is presumptively not advancement unless intended
- Proof Required: Writing: Intestate declared in a document that gift is advance against what the heir would receive at death
- Hotchpot: value is added back into estate and then shares calculated and distrusted with the subtraction from the recipient’s share
- Children are charged if parent died, and if too much distributed it is irrevocable, so no pay back
Simultaneous Death
must survive 120 hours=5 days
Disclaim
- Cannot force to inherit
- Reasons to disclaim: burdensome or tax/liability
- Requirements; writing, timely filed (9 months from date of death)
- Cannot accept and then disclaim and once disclaim it is irrevocable
- Legal Effect: treat heir as if they died first
- Cannot disclaim to avoid the federal tax liens
Will Law
- Real Property: law of situs
- Personal Property: domicile at time of death
- Savings Statute: will is admissible to probate if the will is in writing and executed in accordance with the law of Wisconsin, state where executed, domicile at execution or death
Will Requirements for Validity
1) Legal capacity
2) Testamentary capacity- sound mind
3) Testamentary intent
4) Formalities
Legal Capacity
18+ years old
Testamentary Capacity
- Elements:
1) The nature of their act—that is, that the testator is executing a will
2) The nature of the disposition the testator is making—that is, a general understanding of the practical effect of the will as executed
3) The nature and extent of their property
4) The persons who are the natural objects of their bounty (family members)
5) Must be able to understand the above issues to from a reasonable judgment - Testamentary Capacity Issues
Capacity determined at time of will’s execution
Testator with mental or physical ailments or drug addiction
Testator adjudicated insane or incompetent- rebuttable presumption but allowed n a lucid interval
Sane may lack capacity: intoxicated
Testamentary Intent
- Testator intended the instrument to operate as their will
- Promises to discuss or make will in future is not enough
Formalities
- Writing
- Signed
- Witnesses sign within reasonable time after either:
1) Seeing testator sign will and attested immediately afterwards
2) Reasonable time after testator who acknowledges their signature
3) Signed within reasonable where testator is there and witnesses acknowledge document