Wills Flashcards

1
Q

When is something passed intestate?

A

when there is no will, the will fails, the will doesn’t dispose of property, or the will specifies intestate distribution

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2
Q

Surviving Spouse Share

A

Surviving spouse takes the entire estate if no descendants or if the surviving descendants are surviving spouses’ descendants. If there are descendant either 1/2 or 1/3, or a dollar amount +1/2 or 1/3, dependent on the state.

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3
Q

English Per Stirpes

A

start at first-generation

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4
Q

Modern Per Stirpes

A

starts at the first living generation

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5
Q

Per Capita at Each Generation

A

start at the first living generation, then everything goes into the hotchpot and gets divided equally at each generation

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6
Q

Where do things go if no spouse or children?

A

Parents, Brothers, Sisters, grandparents, aunts, uncles, then nearest kin (laughing heirs). If no family, it escheats the state. Brothers, Sisters, Aunts, and Uncles don’t inherit if closer relatives like children survive the testator.

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7
Q

How do adopted children inherit?

A

they are treated the same as a natural child, they can’t inherit from bio family unless adopted as a stepchild.

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8
Q

How do step children and foster children inherit?

A

there are no inheritance rights unless adopted but there may be an adoption by estoppel option

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9
Q

Adoption by estoppel

A

Allows a child to inherit from a step-parent or foster parent when legal custody is gained through an unfulfilled agreement to adopt. However, step-parents can’t inherit from their stepchildren.

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10
Q

Posthumous Children

A

Child in gestation at or after decent death inherits if born in decedent lifetime

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11
Q

When can a nonmarital child inherit from the father?

A

If the parents marry after birth, the man is determined to be a father in a paternity suit, or if the man is proven to be a father after death. Half children will inherit equally with full-blood siblings. However, some states only let them inherit half or none.

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12
Q

Disinheritance Clause

A

In a majority of states, they are ineffective when it leads to the will being partially intestate, under a minor and UPC they are given full effect, and the heir is treated if they disclaimed.

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13
Q

Simultaneous Death

A

Applies to probate and non-probate transfers. Under UPC, Half the states implement 120 hours, and the other spouse must live 120 hours after the other to take as a beneficiary. Under this, each spouse takes as if the other predeceased.

Under the USDA, there is no 120-hour rule, if there is any evidence that one person outlived the other they are treated as living at the time of the other’s death.

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14
Q

Disclaimers

A

Treat claimant as deceased, must describe the property in writing, sign it, and file within 9 months (or 9 months after you turn 21), to properly disclaim. There is an estoppel of the disclaimer if any benefits are accepted. Can’t disclaim to avoid federal tax.

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15
Q

Slayer Rule

A

Applies to probate and non-probate transfers. If one feloniously and intentionally causes the death of a decedent, the property passes as though the killer predeceased the decedent. Also, it will sever the joint tenancy.

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16
Q

Advancement

A

For intestacy, a lifetime gift is treated as part of the heirs share of the estate when intent is shown by a contemporaneous writing by donor and there is a written acknowledgement by the donee

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17
Q

Satisfaction

A

For Wills, a lifetime gift is treated as part of the heirs’ share of the estate when the intent is shown by contemporaneous writing by the donor and there is a written acknowledgment by the donee

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18
Q

Will formalities

A

Testator has the capacity (age and sound mind), there is intent to make a will, there is a writing, and signature by the testator, two attesting witnesses who saw the witness’s presence, and the witness signed in the testator’s presence.

Being on the phone does not = presence.

Heirs only have an expectancy to inherit, not a property interest until the testator dies.

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19
Q

Purging Shares

A

When a witness is also a beneficiary unless the witness is supernumerary, the witness would still take without the will, and under the minority view it just isn’t purged.

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20
Q

Will Harmless Error Rule

A

Under the UPC, a defectively executed will be given effect if clear and convincing evidence that the testator intended for this to be his will. Also applies to defective revocations.

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21
Q

Holographic WIll

A

Testator must of be a sound mind a capacity, writing must be in handwriting, and the testator must sign. Some jurisdictions require entire things in handwriting, some only require material portions.

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22
Q

Integration of a Will

A

All pages present at execution are part of the will

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23
Q

Codicil

A

an amendment to a will must be executed with all the will formalities, it can republish a will, and a revocation of a will revokes all the codicils. A properly executed codicil can validate a defectively executed will. This happened if there was an intent for the original document to be a will.

If a will is republished by codicil, it can result in a change in the child’s status, if the child is born before the republication is not considered pretermitted and can’t be protected under the permitted state.

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24
Q

Incorporation by Reference

A

If incorporating a document it must be in existence at the time the will was executed, sufficiently described, and the will must show intent to incorporate. A signed list of tangible personal property is valid even if made or altered after the will’s signed execution.

Under the UPC, for the disposition of personal items, the document must be signed and dated by the testator and the items are described within reasonable certainty.

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25
Q

Acts of Independent Significance

A

Can identify beneficiaries or property by reference to acts or events that have significance apart from the will. Joey leaves the contents of his bank account “to my employees.” If Joey then fires some of the old employees and hires new ones, the new employees will inherit the contents of the bank account under this provision

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26
Q

Pour Over Will

A

All assets pour into a trust upon the testator’s death. It is valid even if trust is amended after the will execution. The trust does not need to be in existence at the will execution.

27
Q

General Power of Appointment

A

can be exercised in favor of donee, appointed property not subject to an elective share or creditors

28
Q

Special Power of Appointment

A

Can’t be exercised in favor of donee, appointive property not subject to an elective share or creditors

29
Q

How to exercise appointment powers

A

A residuary clause doesn’t give a power of appointment unless in a minority jurisdiction. Blanket powers of appointments are allowed

30
Q

Nonprobate Assets

A

Can’t be disposed of by will, this is life insurance, property passing by right of survivorship, property in a trust.

Insurance is considered a contract and the beneficiary is who is named not who is named in the will. Disposition is governed by the policy of the contract.

31
Q

How to revoke a will?

A

By operation of law, written instrument, Revocation by implication (written), or physical act

32
Q

Revocation by Operation of Law

A

Usually doesn’t affect, unless omitted spouse statute. Divorce or annulment revokes all provisions in favor of the former spouse. Can add in omitted children when there is an omitted child statute and the child was born after the execution of the will.

33
Q

Revocation by Written Instrument

A

Must be executed with the same formalities as a will, inconsistent provisions in later instruments revoke prior ones by implication

34
Q

Revocation by Physical Act

A

Burning, tearing, obliterating, or canceling with intent to revoke. Can’t partially revoke by physical act, and a will not found at testator death is considered revoked. Must be done in the person’s presence.

35
Q

Revival of a Revoke Will

A

A will is revived when it is executed with formalities, republished by codicil, or the Destruction of a revoking instrument revoked the will unless the testator did no so intend.

36
Q

Dependent Relative Revocation

A

Revocation is disregarded when a will was revoked on a mistake of law or fact and would not have occurred but for the mistaken belief and the results from disregarding the revocation come closer to the testator’s intent

37
Q

Contract to make a gift by will

A

This is established when the provision in the will states the terms of the contract, there is express reference to the contract and the writing is signed by the decedent as evidence of the contract. If there is a breach, damages are awarded or a constructive trust.

38
Q

Joint (single will for two people) and Mutual (2 wills that contain the same provisions) Wills

A

Mutual wills are not presumed contractual and joint wills are not presumed contractual but courts treat them as contractual. If there is a contract not to revoke wills, one cannot revoke their will once one party dies in compliance. If revoked a constructive trust will be put into place for the beneficiaries of the will.

39
Q

Anti Lapse Statute

A

Usually only applies to wills and UPC Applies to trusts and life insurance. Words of survivorship can negate anti-lapse but not under the UPC.

Usually, if a beneficiary dies before the testator, the gift lapses and goes to the residual of the will. However, if there is an antilapse statute, A gift that should lapse is saved by statute if the predeceasing beneficiary is within the specified relationship to the testator and leaves surviving descendant.

UPC saves gifts for stepchildren, grandparents, or descendants of grandparents.

Most states don’t save a lapsed statute to a predeceasing spouse.

Remember to look at the degree of relationship between the beneficiary to the testator, gifts for friends won’t lapse but for children, they will. Also, look if there are any descendants, the beneficiary had no children it won’t be saved.

40
Q

Adepmtion

A

When a specific devise or bequest fails, the gift fails and the testator gets nothing. There can be partial ademption. Bequests of securities are seen as general unless my is used.

When there is not enough money in the estate the gifts abate. Abatement reduces the amount of the gift the beneficiary takes.

Unless something is noted by the testator gifts abate in this order: intestate property, residual, general legacies (gift of money or personal property), then specific devises and bequests.

41
Q

Exceptions to Ademption

A

a. Insurance proceeds and condemnation awards paid after death
b. Property subject to the executory contract (testator’s rights pass)
c. Securities owned as a result of merger, consolidation, etc.
d. Property sold by a guardian

42
Q

Elective Share Statute

A

A spouse may take a statutory share instead of a share in a will. In most states its 1/3 with kids or 1/2 with none.

43
Q

Pretermitted Child Statutes

A

Afterborn or after-adopted children take an intestate share unless the omission appears as intentional, the testator had other children after execution and left all of his estates to the other parent of the omitted child, or the testator provided for the omitted child outside of the will. Limited to the same bequest as to other children under UPC.

44
Q

Homestead

A

Protects the family homestead or farm from creditors

45
Q

Family Allowance

A

Provide support to the family during probate

46
Q

Exempt Personal Property

A

A surviving spouse is entitled to petition over certain items

47
Q

Standing to Contest a Will

A

any person whose interest would be directly affected by the will’s admission to probate

48
Q

Grounds to contest a will

A

a. Defective execution
b. Will offered has been revoked
c. Testator lacked testamentary intent or capacity
d. The will or gift is a product of undue influence
e. The will or gift was procured by fraud
f. The document was executed or a gift made because of a mistake

49
Q

Testatroy Capacity to make a will

A

18 years old+ at the date of execution and the testator understood the nature of the act, the nature and extent of her property, people who are natural objects of testator bounty, and the nature of disposition. Insurance delusions can only be invalided to the extent of the delusion-caused disposition.

50
Q

Undue Influence

A

When a will is executed in undue influence the whole will be invalidated if it affects the entire will. If the undue influence only affects part of the will, such as giving shares to the undue influencer, only that part of the will be invalidated.

Undue influence is presumed when there is a confidential relationship, they participated in drafting the will, and the provision of the will are unnatural like in devising to people outside the family.

When elements of presumption are shown, the burden shifts to the proponent of the will to prove it was not induced by undue influence.

To show undue influence there must have been influence, the influence exerted was to overpower the mind and free will of the tester, and the product of the influence was that a will was executed that would not have been but for the influence.

Free will of the testator must be destroyed.

51
Q

Fraud

A

Willful deceit as to character or content of a will as to a material fact. Will or gift as a result of fraud is invalid.

52
Q

Fraud in the execution

A

There is a misrepresentation as to the identity of the contracts of the instrument. The testator didn’t know they were signing a will or what it contained. If there is fraudulent prevention of execution there is a possible constructive trust remedy.

53
Q

Fraud in the Inducement

A

Testator knows they are singing a will and what it contains but is deceived about a fact and makes the will based on that fact.

54
Q

Mistake as to Instrument

A

If the person was to mistaken that the the document they signed was a will, extrinsic evidence can be admitted to show it was a mistake

55
Q

Mistake in Inducement

A

The testator is mistaken as to some fact and makes a will based on that mistake. There is no relief unless a mistake appears on the face of the will

56
Q

Mistake in contents

A

a. No relief for mistaken omission
b. Evidence not admitted to contradict plain meaning
c. Latent ambiguity (ambiguous as applied)—evidence admissible
d. Patent ambiguity (on the face of will)—gift fails under traditional view, but modern
view allows evidence of intent

57
Q

Reformation of Will

A

The UPC permits the court to reform will terms to conform to testator intent if clean and convincing evidence of fraud or mistake

58
Q

No contest clause

A

A will is enforce unless contestant had probable cause to challenge the will

59
Q

Personal Representative

A

In order: the person named, the spouse named as a beneficiary, a beneficiary, the spouse if not named, any other heir, or a creditor

60
Q

Duties of a Personal Representative

A

GIve notice, collect assets, manage assets, pay expenses and distribute the property

61
Q

Creditors Claims

A

Must be filed within the time specified statute or are barred. In order for debts to be paid: admin expenses, funeral, and last illness expenses, family allowance, tax claims, secured claims, judgment, and everything else

62
Q

Abatement

A

When assets are insufficient, gifts are reduced in the order of: property passing through intestacy, residue, general legacies, and specific devices and bequests

63
Q

Ambiguous Terms in A Will

A

look at extrinsic evidence, Favor intestate heirs, Favor construction avoiding intestacy, Favor construction consistent with the perceived plan, Every portion of will give effect if possible, Between completely inconsistent provisions, one most recently added is favored

64
Q

Savings Statute

A

Will is admissible in another jurisdiction if it was executed within the law of the jurisdiction, the state where the will was executed, the testator’s domicile at the time of the will’s execution to the testator’s death.