Wills and Estates 4 & 5* Flashcards
What does a ‘Grant of representation’ do?
Establishes the:
- Authority of the PR’s to act,
- Validity of the deceased’s will
NB: only covers assets in the succession estate
What date can an executor act from?
Executors are PRs appointed by the Will.
Can act from the date of death.
The grant confirms their authority.
What date can an administrator act from?
Administrators are PRs appointed by the Grant.
They have NO authority until the grant is issued
What is the role of a PR?
- collect deceased assets
- ensure deceased’s debts are paid
- ensure tax is paid
- distribute assets to beneficiaries
NB: fiduciary in nature
When will PR’s become trustees?
- The will expressly appoints them,
- There is an intestacy (the estate is held on trust with a power to sell)
- A statutory trust arises under intestacy where there is a minor beneficiary
NB: will NOT automatically be a trustee
Is a Personal Representative personally liable for a breach of duty?
Yes
What are the duties of a Personal Representative before the issue of Grant?
- dispose of the deceased’s body
- Provide information about the estate to HMRC and pay IHT (grant will not be issued until tax is paid)
What’s involved in ‘collecting in’?
- identify and locate the deceased’s estate.
- Identify the deceased’s liabilities and creditors.
- Obtain control, possession or legal ownership of the assets.
What’s involved in ‘administering the estate’? Name 5
- Keep assets secure
- Pay deceased liabilities
- Meeting administration expenses,
- Paying legacies,
- distributing the residue to those legally entitled.
NB: only succession estate
Duty to provide inventory & account
PRs must keep Estate accounts (show assets & values, record of steps taken whilst administering).
Beneficiaries/creditors may ask to see & court can order PR’s produce an inventory and accounts.
- What are the general duties on PR’s?
- When should they complete administration?
- act with due diligence,
- act within a reasonable time
- administration should be completed within 12 months i.e. the executor’s year (if longer PR’s are required to justify the delay).
Does the appointment to be a PR end once the administration is finalised?
No - the appointment is life long, so
if any assets discovered post-administration, PRs have duty to administer them
& PRs may be personally liable if unknown beneficiaries come forward post-administration.
Statutory duty of care - are PRs subject to same duty as trustees?
YES
& higher standard for professional PRs than lay PRs, as well as those possessing special knowledge or PURPORTING themselves as having such knowledge.
Applies when PRs exercise power to invest, delegate, insure & purchase land.
Can PR’s purchase assets from the estate at fair value?
Not unless they have an order from the court or with agreement of fully-informed beneficiaries.
PR’s must not place themselves in a position of conflict of interest.
Transaction would be VOIDABLE
Can PR’s profit from their position?
No - but payments will not be a breach if the PR acts in a professional capacity and the payments are authorised under the will or s.29 TA 2000
Not unless they have an order from the court or with agreement of fully-informed beneficiaries.
If the deceased died intestate, which powers will apply?
Statutory only
If the deceased left a will, which powers will apply?
- Statutory to the extent that these do not conflict with express provisions.
- Will may confer additional powers that go beyond/exclude/modify statutory powers - will take PRIORITY.
Powers granted by Statute take precedence over powers granted by the will true or false?
False - The will takes precedence.
Do PR’s have a statutory power to sell, charge or lease?
Yes
When do PR’s have the statutory power to appropriate an asset in satisfaction of a beneficiary’s entitlement? 3 rules
As long as:
- A specific beneficiary must not be prejudiced (e.g. was the asset promised to someone else)
- The recipient beneficiary has consented
- The value of the asset is considered at the date of transfer, NOT the date of death
Can PR’s appropriate an asset valued in excess of the beneficiaries entitlement (at date of appropriation)
No
Can PRs appropriate an asset valued less than the beneficiary’s entitlement (& date of appropriation)
Yes + make a balancing cash transfer to meet amount
Do PR’s have a statutory power to insure?
Yes - PRs are authorised take out insurance to insure estate assets at full value,
& to pay the insurance premiums out of either estate income or capital.
Do PR’s have a statutory power to invest?
Yes, they have a duty to preserve the estate and actively invest
- must have regard to the standard investment criteria (suitability & diversification)
- have a duty to obtain advice unless they reasonably conclude that it is unnecessary or inappropriate.
- must regularly review investments