Wills Flashcards
Holographic will
A holographic will is in a testator’s handwriting, signed by the testator, and need not be witnessed.
Beneficiary of life insurance contract
A beneficiary of a life insurance contract takes by virtue of the insurance contract. The proceeds are not part of the decedent’s estate, unles they are payable to the estate as beneficiary.
Who gets proceeds of life insurance policy
Life insurance policies typically provide that proceeds will only be payable to the etsate as a beneficiary named on an appropriate form filed with the insurance company. Other possible methods of changing a beneficiary are thus viewed as being excluded by the insurance contract.
Beneficiary change outside of filing the appropriate form
Some courts have upheld a beneficiary change by will if the insurance company does not object.
Incorporation by reference
A will may incorporate by reference another writing not executed with testamentary formalities, provided the other writing meets three requirements: (i) it existed at the time the will was executed; (ii) the testator intended the writing to be incorporated; and (iii) the writing is described in the will with sufficient certainty so as to permit its identification.
What if a beneficiary dies before the testator at CL
Under common law, if a beneficiary died before the testator or before a point in time by which he was required to survive under the will, the gift failed and went to the residue unless the will provided for an alternate disposition.
Anti-lapse statutes
Today, amost all states have anti-lapse statutes that provide for the alternate disposition of lapsed gifts. Under the majority of statutes, if the gift was made to a relation of the testator within a specific degree, and the relation predeceased the testator but left issue, then the issue succeeds to the gift, unless the will expressly states otherwise
Abating gifts
Gifts by will are abated, i.e., reduced, when the assets of the estate are insufficient to pay all debts and legacies.
Order of abatement
If not otherwise specified in the will, gifts are abated in the following order: (i) intestate property, (ii) residuary bequests, (iii) general bequests, and (iv) specific bequests. Abatement within each category is pro rata.
What if a JDX doesn’t allow for holographic wills but the facts say the T handwrote their will and then had people sign it
[not a rule statement, but an essay note]
Don’t get tricked by this – a holographic will is both handwritten AND unwitnessed. So a handwritten will that is witnessed is a valid normal will, even though the jurisdiction says no holographic wills. What that kind of statute means is no TRUE holographic wills. So if the T had a handwritten will + no witnesses, it would be invalid, as opposed to handwritten will + witenesses, which woudl be valid.
Revocation methods
A will may be revoked wholly or partially in three ways: subsequent writings, physical destruction, or operation of law
Physical destruction of the will
Physical destruction may take the form of burning any portion of the will or canceling, tearing, obliterating, or destroying a material portion of the will with the intent to revoke it.
intent requirement for revocation by physical act
Both the act and a simultaneous intent to revoke must be proven to yield a valid revocation
Pretermitted heir statutes
Pretermitted heir statutes permit children of a T, under certain circumstances, to claim a share of the estate even though they were omitted from the T’s will
When are children pretermitted
While the birth or adoption of a child after the execution of a will does not invalidate the will, such children are omitted from the will.