Wills and Decedent's Estates Flashcards
(50 cards)
When a gift is to an entire class and one member of the class predeceases the testator, what results when there is no anti-lapse statute applicable?
What happens when there is an anti-lapse statute applicable?
No anti-lapse statute applicable: only the surviving members take
Anti-lapse statute applicable: the issue of the predeceased member take the member’s share. The majority of states and the UPC apply the anti-lapse statute first, before the determination of the class gift.
What is a supplement to a will that alters, amends, or modifies the will, rather than replacing it?
A codicil.
A codicil must be executed with the same formalities as a will, but need not be executed with the same formalities as the will that it alters, amends, or modifies. An attested will may be altered, amended, or modified by a holographic codicil and a holographic will may be altered, amended, or modified by an attested codicil. A valid codicil republishes the will as of the date of the codicil and may even validate an invalid will if the codicil refers to the will with sufficient certainty to identify or incorporate it, or if the codicil is on the same paper as the invalid will.
How does elder abuse affect an individual taking from a decedent’s estate?
Some states bar an individual from taking if the individual is guilty of elder abuse.
Requirements vary- some require conduct just short of homicide, while others will bar for abandonment.
Most jurisdictions treat the abuser as predeceasing the decedent.
When two individuals die at the same time and there is no evidence as to who actually died first, what act is applied, and what is the result?
The Uniform Simultaneous Death Act (USDA) provides that when there is insufficient evidence of the order of death of two individuals, the property of each passes as though the other individual predeceased him.
Note: this act only applies when there is no instrument to state otherwise.
What is a putative spouse and how is one treated for purposes of inheritance?
When a marriage is not valid but at least one spouse believes in good faith that it is, then the spouses are termed “putative” and qualify as spouses for inheritance purposes.
What are the six fiduciary duties of a power of attorney?
- Exercise the powers for the benefit of the principal and in accordance with reasonable expectations
- Act in good faith
- Separate the assets of the principal from agent
- Exercise reasonable care, competence, and diligence
- Account for all transactions made on behalf of the principal
- File an accounting of the administration whenever so directed by the court
What is the difference between a duplicate and copy in terms of lost wills?
Duplicate: one of two copies of the same will executed in the same manner, each complying with the same formalities. This may be admitted to probate.
Copy: like a photocopy, cannot itself be admitted to probate, although it may be used as proof of testamentary intent.
What do most jurisdictions require for a valid disclaimer?
Most jurisdictions require that the disclaimer be:
1. In writing
- Signed
- Filed within a certain period after the decedent’s death
When is the value of an inter vivos gift determined?
The value is determined at the time the recipient takes possession or enjoys it, whichever is first.
When a spouse is omitted from a will, what is the presumption and how is it rebutted under the traditional view?
A rebuttable presumption is created that the omission was a mistake.
The traditional view is that the presumption cannot be rebutted unless the intent to omit the spouse is apparent from the language of the will or the spouse was otherwise provided for.
If a party decides to disclaim a testamentary gift, what happens to that property?
The disclaiming party is treated as if the party predeceased the decedent, and the property is distributed to the next eligible taker.
How does a decedent’s intent weigh on how property passes via intestacy?
The decedent’s intent regarding the disposition of property that passes by intestacy is irrelevant.
What is the order gifts are abated, unless otherwise specified in the will?
- Intestate property
- Residuary bequests
- General bequests
- Specific bequests
Under the modern trend, what is required for a gift to be considered an advancement?
Under the UPC, which is the modern trend, a gift is an advancement only if:
1. The decedent declared it so in a contemporaneous writing / the heir acknowledged it so in a writing, or
- That writing otherwise indicates that the gift was to be taken into account in computing the division and distribution of the decedent’s intestate estate
Note: the UPC approach applies to all heirs, not just the decedent’s children
What is the majority rule regarding the specific devise of encumbered property?
In most states, the specific devisee of encumbered property takes subject to the mortgage, notwithstanding the fact that the will contained a clause directing the executor to pay the decedent’s debts.
What comprises the marital-property portion of a decedent’s augmented estate, and how much of that may a surviving spouse claim as the elective share?
The UPC subjects property acquired before and during marriage to the “marital property” portion of the augmented estate to which the surviving spouse is entitled.
Under the UPC, the surviving spouse may take an elective-share amount equal to 50% of the value of the marital-property portion of the augmented estate.
What does a homestead exemption statute do?
Under such statute, a certain acreage or value of real property is exempt from creditors’ claims, is inalienable during the life of the owner without consent, and passes upon death by statute, not by will.
Note: the amount of the homestead exemption differs by state.
What does the Uniform Transfer to Minors Act do?
The Uniform Transfer to Minors Act (UTMA) appoints a custodian to use property transferred to a minor at the custodian’s discretion on the minor’s behalf without court approval and with no accounting requirement. The custodian must turn any remaining property over to the minor upon the minor’s attainment of age 21.
What is the support called that a surviving spouse may receive during probate?
Family allowance. The amount of family allowance varies by jurisdiction. Some jurisdictions allow minor children to receive a family allowance as well. Depending on the jurisdiction, the family allowance is either a set amount or one based on the marital standard of living.
If a testator executes a will, then adopts a child, then dies without revising the will, what is the presumption regarding the omission of that adopted child?
What can overcome this presumption?
In such case, a presumption is created that the omission of the child was accidental.
This can be rebutted by evidence that (1) the omission was intentional, (2) the testator had other children when the will was executed and left substantially all of the estate to the other parent, or (3) the child was provided for outside of the will with the intent that it be in lieu of a provision in the will.
What three things negate an omitted spouse’s entitlement to the intestate share of the decedent’s estate when the marriage began after the execution of the will?
A spouse omitted from a will is entitled to an intestate share unless:
- A valid prenuptial agreement exists,
- The spouse was given property outside of the will in lieu of a disposition, or
- The spouse was specifically excluded from the will.
If a gift is adeemed, what is the beneficiary entitled to?
i. Whatever is left of the specifically devised property,
ii. The balance of the purchase price owing from the purchaser of the property,
iii. Any amount of condemnation award for the taking of the property, to the extent unpaid upon death,
iv. Any proceeds unpaid at death on fire or casualty insurance on or other recovery for injury to the property, or
v. Property acquired from the foreclosure of a security interest on a specifically devised note.
What is the rule for ademption by satisfaction?
A general, specific, or demonstrative devise may be satisfied in whole or in part by an inter vivos transfer to the devisee after the execution of the will, if it was the testator’s intent to satisfy the devise by the transfer.
What is quasi-community property?
Quasi-community property is separate property that would have been community property had the parties been domiciled in a community-property state when acquired.
It is treated as community property for distribution purposes.