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  • Will (law)

    The law of wills and trusts
    Part of the common law series
    Inheritance
    Intestacy  · Testator  · Probate
    Power of appointment
    Simultaneous death  · Slayer rule
    Disclaimer of interest
    Types of will
    Holographic will  · Will contract
    Joint wills and mutual wills
    Parts of a will
    Codicil  · Attestation clause
    Incorporation by reference
    Residuary clause
    Problems of property disposition
    Lapse and anti-lapse
    Ademption  · Abatement
    Acts of independent significance
    Elective share  · Pretermitted heir
    Contesting a will
    Testamentary capacity  · Undue influence
    Trusts
    Pour-over will  · Spendthrift trust
    Protective trust  · Express trust
    Charitable trust  · Cy pres doctrine
    Resulting trust  · Constructive trust
    Honorary trust
    Other areas of the common law
    Contract law  · Tort law  · Property law
    Criminal law  · Evidence
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    In the law, a will or testament is a document by which a person (the testator) regulates the rights of others over his property or family after death. For the devolution of property not disposed of by will, see inheritance and intestacy. In the strictest sense, "will" is a general term, while "testament" applies only to dispositions of personal property (this distinction is seldom observed). A will is also used as the instrument in a trust.

    Contents

    Freedom of disposition

    The conception of freedom of disposition by will, familiar as it is in modern England and the United States, both generally considered common law systems, is by no means universal. In fact, complete freedom is the exception rather than the rule. Civil law systems often put some restrictions on the possibilities of disposal.

    Advocates for gays and lesbians have pointed to the inheritance rights of spouses as desirable for same-sex couples as well, through same-sex marriage or civil unions. Historically, courts have been more willing to strike down wills leaving property to a same-sex partner for reasons such as incapacity or undue influence.

    Legal requirements for the creation of a will

    Any person over the age of 18 can draft his own will without the aid of an attorney. Additional requirements may vary, depending on the jurisdiction, but every will must contain the following:

    • The testator must clearly identify himself as the maker of the will, and that a will is being made; this is commonly called "publication" of the will, and is typically satisfied by the the words "last will and testament" on the face of the document.
    • The testator must declare that he revokes all previously-made wills and codicils. Otherwise, a subsequently-made will revokes earlier wills and codicils only to the extent that they are inconsistent. However, if a subsequent will is completely inconsistent with an earlier one, that earlier will be considered completely revoked by implication.
    • The testator must demonstrate that he has the capacity to dispose of his property, and does so freely and willingly.
    • The testator must sign and date the will, usually in the presence of at least two disinterested witnesses (persons who are not beneficiaries).
    • The testator's signature must be placed at the end of the will. If this is not observed, any text following the signature will be ignored, or the entire will may be invalidated if what comes after the signature is so material that ignoring it would defeat the testator's intentions.

    After the testator has died, a probate proceeding must be initiated in court to determine the validity of the will, i.e., whether it satisfied the legal requirements, and to appoint an executor. If the will is ruled invalid in probate, then inheritance will occur under the laws of intestacy as if a will were never drafted.

    Although there is no legal requirement that a will be drawn up by a lawyer, there are many pitfalls into which home-made wills may fall, and it is highly desirable that any will is the subject of legal advice before drafting or execution. The person who makes a will is not available to explain him or herself, or to correct any technical deficiency or error in expression, when it comes into effect on that person's death, and so there is no room for mistake.

    A very common error (for example) in the execution of home-made wills in England is to use a beneficiary (typically a spouse or other close family members) as a witness, although this has the effect in law of disinheriting the witness regardless of the provisions of the will.

    Some states recognize a holographic will, made out entirely in the testator's own hand. A minority of states even recognize the validity of nuncupative (oral) wills. In England, the formalities of wills are relaxed for soldiers who express their wishes on active service.

    A will may not include a requirement that an heir commit an illegal, immoral, or other act against public policy as a condition of receipt. Under laws of certain states of the United States of America, a will cannot be used to disinherit a surviving spouse, who is entitled to at least a portion of the testator's estate. In England, a will may disinherit a spouse, but close relations excluded from a will (including but not limited to spouses) may apply to the court for provision to be made for them in the court's discretion.

    It is not only a good idea, but essential that the testator give his executor the power to pay debts, taxes, and administration expenses (probate, etc.). Warren Burger's will did not contain this, which wound up costing his estate thousands.

    Revocation

    Methods and effect

    The physical destruction of a will by the testator will revoke it. This could be accomplished by burning or tearing the physical document itself, or even by striking out the signature. Most jurisdictions allow partial revocation if only part of the text or a particular provision is crossed out. Other jurisdictions will either ignore the attempt or hold that the entire will was actually revoked. A testator may also be able to revoke by the physical act of another (as would be necessary if he is physically incapacitated), if this is done in his presence and in the presence of witnesses. Some jurisdictions may presume that a will has been destroyed if it was last seen in the possession of the testator but is found mutilated or cannot be found after his death.

    A will may also be revoked by the execution of a new will. Most wills contain stock language that expressly revokes any wills that came before them, however, because normally a court will still attempt to read the wills together to the extent they are consistent.

    In some jurisdictions, the complete revocation of a will automatically revives the next most recent will, while others hold that revocation leaves the testator with no will so that his heirs will instead inherit by intestate succession.

    Dependant relative revocation

    Many jurisdictions exercise an equitable doctrine known as dependant relative revocation. Under this doctrine, courts may disregard a revocation that was based on a mistake of law on the part of the testator as to the effect of the revocation. For example, if a testator mistakenly believes that an earlier will can be revived by the revocation of a later will, the court will ignore the later revocation if the later will comes closer to fulfilling the testator's intent than not having a will at all.

    Wills in history

    Some wills have unusual wishes. Charles Vance Millar's will was notorious for offering the bulk of his estate to the Toronto woman who had the greatest number of children in the ten years after his death (the Great Stork Derby). Another famous case, Estate of Kidd (Ariz., 1971), involved a will found on a deceased prospector who willed his entire $250,000 estate "for research or some scientific proof of a soul of the human body which leaves at death. I think in time there can be a photograph of a soul leaving the human at death."

    Though most Americans are aware they need a will, as many as 66%, according to Consumer Reports, don't have one. Among those who died without a will are Abraham Lincoln, Andrew Johnson, Ulysses S. Grant, Howard Hughes, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Pablo Picasso.

    External Links

    See also Will (law): legal history






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