| Wills Trusts and Probate |
|
Not made a will? Do you realise the risks you are running? The law sets out clear rules for what happens to your estate - property, personal possessions and cash - if you die without a will. Passing away without a will is known in legal parlance as dying intestate and the rules that govern the distribution of the estate in such circumstances is known as the law of intestacy. Under the Administration of Estates Act 1925 the spouse and children do not automatically receive everything in the deceased's estate. There is a strict pecking order under the Act for deciding who gets what. The surviving spouse is treated harshly by the intestacy rules. Where the deceased leaves a spouse but no children, the spouse receives all the personal chattels such as a car, furniture, clothes and jewelry, a legacy of £200,000 and one half of the balance outright. The remaining balance then passes to various relatives; first to the deceased's parents if either are still alive, but if not then equally amongst brothers and sisters Where there is a spouse and children, the spouse receives all the personal chattels, a legacy of £125,000 and the income from one half of the balance. The rest passes to the children on reaching eighteen. All this can leave the spouse and the children with a financial headache, typical problems include:
Harsh treatment In short, in nearly all cases failure to make a will can be a nightmare for the beneficiaries. Where there are no children other family members have a right to benefit in the estate. This may not be such a good thing. Failure to make a will denies the deceased the opportunity of naming suitable people in the form of executors to administer the estate. Instead beneficiaries administer the estate of the deceased; they may not be suitable to deal with large sums of money or in some cases a business. In short, in nearly all cases, failure to make a will leaves too much to chance. |


