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Summary Wills and Administration Detailed Notes SQE1 FLK2

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Detailed notes summarising the key elements of the Wills and Administration element of the SQE1 FLK2 SRA exam.

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Sqe 1
Module
Sqe 1










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Uploaded on
January 24, 2025
Number of pages
16
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Summary

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Wills and Administration of Estates



WILLS AND ADMIN: REVISION NOTES
CONTENT


1. Wills and Intestacy
 Validity of wills and codicils
 Property passing outside of the estate
 Intestacy Rules
 Alterations and Revocations
 Interpretation of wills
 Personal Representatives
2. Administration
 Grants of representation
 Administration of Estate: Dealing with the assets
 Claims under the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependents) Act 1975
3. Taxation
 IHT
 Income tax
 CGT

WILLS AND INTESTACY
VALIDITY OF WILLS AND CODICILS
Capacity  18 or over

Three requirements of a valid will: Requisite mental capacity (At the time the
will was executed:
1. Capacity o Understood the nature of the act and it
2. Intention broad effects
3. Executed in accordance with s9 WillsExtent
o of their property
Act 1837
o Any moral claims
o Not suffering from any insane delusions
Presumption of capacity where the will appears
rational  if someone challenges the will, the burden
shifts to them to disprove this.
Intention  General intention – intent to make a will
 Specific Intention – intended to make that
will
General rule  presumption of knowledge and
approval, as long as the testator signed themselves

Exceptions
 Testator blind/illiterate
 Not signed personally
 Coercion or duress
 Mistake
Executed in accordance with  In writing and signed by the testator
s9 Wills Act 1837 (though the testator could direct someone else
to)
 Intended by signature to give effect to the
will
 Acknowledged in the presence of two
witnesses
 The witnesses signed in the testator’s
presence

,Wills and Administration of Estates


Where the witness is a beneficiary or a
beneficiaries’ spouse, a gift will be invalid.

Attestation clause  there is a presumption of due
execution unless signed by someone else.

Where signed by someone else an affidavit of due
execution would be appropriate.
Property passing outside of the will

 Joint property- survivorship
 Insurance policies
 Pension benefits
 Trust property

INTESTACY RULES

Operate where:

 There is no valid will
 An invalid will
 Will fails to dispose of the whole of the estate

Scenario What happens to the estate
Statutory
Surviving Trusts/Issue:
spouse or civil partner and  Spouse receives personal chattels and
issue an absolute legacy of £322,000
 Primary beneficiaries – the living children, split equally
 Residuary estate divided in half
 Grandchildren o ½ on trust for spouse or civil
partner
o Other ½ for issue on statutory
trusts
Must survive them 28 days
No surviving spouse or civil partner Order of entitlement:
1. Issue on statutory trusts
2. Parents
3. Brothers and Sisters
4. Half siblings
5. Grandparents
6. Uncles and aunts
7. Half uncles and aunts
8. Bona Vacantia – goes to the crown
 Adopted children are treated for intestacy purposes as the children of their
adoptive parents.
 Human Fertilization and Embryology Act – resolves that a child will be entitled to
their parent’s estate

INTERPRETATION OF WILLS

The task when interpreting a will, the testator’s intention as expressed in the will when
read as a whole.

Two basic presumptions are applied:

 Non-technical words bear their ordinary meaning
 Technical words are given their technical meaning

, Wills and Administration of Estates


General rule  the court is not prepared to consider other evidence in order to try to
establish what the testator intended. If the meaning is unclear the gift will fail for
uncertainty.

The court will look at extrinsic evidence where the wording is

 meaningless
 ambiguous on the face of it
 ambiguous in the light of surrounding circumstances

The court has the power to rectify the will where the testator’s intentions are
clear but the wording does not carry them to effect.

Property passing under the will

 A will speaks from the date of death, unless contrary intention appears in the will
 A will speaks from the date of execution, unless contrary intention appears in the
will

Failed gifts


Generic Gifts  not tied to a specific item but rather to a category or value

Specific Gift  A particular asset/ item


A gift may fail where:

 There is uncertainty
 A beneficiary witnessed the will
 Divorce/dissolution
 The gift Adeems as the testator no longer own the property at death
o If the asset has been changed but is substantially the same it will not fail
o If the substance has changed, the gift will have adeemed
o Ademption only applies to a specific gift.
 Lapse  the beneficiary dies before the testator
o If two people die at the same moment, the oldest is assumed to have died
first
o Gift to one or more person – in equal portions, the portion will pass by
intestacy, a class gift will be split.
 Disclaimer  beneficiary does not accept the gift, the gift then passes on
residue/intestacy
 Forfeiture  A person should benefit from the estate of someone they have
unlawfully killed




ALTERATIONS AND REVOCATIONS

Revocation

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