100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Summary Wills SQE 1 revision notes

Rating
-
Sold
-
Pages
38
Uploaded on
01-08-2025
Written in
2025/2026

Detailed notes on each topic and element of Wills. The SQE 1 Wills syllabus summarised. Passed SQE 1 on first attempt with these notes

Institution
SQE1
Module
SQE1

Content preview

Wills
Validity of Wills - How Property Passes on Death

Joint property Held as JT:
-​ On death the interest passes by survivorship to the surviving joint tenant

Held as TC:
-​ The share of the tenant passes on their death under their will

Insurance policies Where a person takes out a life assurance policy
-​ The benefit of the policy belongs to the deceade’s
-​ The policy will be paid to the deceased’s PRs who will distribute the money
according to the terms of the will or intestacy rules

Where a life assurance policy is writted in trust for the benefit of someone else
-​ The policy will be transferred to the named beneficiary
-​ The policy will be paid to the beneficiary regardless of the terms of the will

Pension benefits Lump sums:
-​ Calculated on the basis of an employee’s salary at the time of their death
-​ Is paid by the trustees of the pension fund to family members chosen at the
trustees discretion
-​

Trust property If the deceased has an equitable interest as a beneficiary of a trust
-​ The trust property will devolve according to the terms of the trust not the
will of the life tenant


Wills terminology

Testator / testatrix Person making the will

Revocation clause Revoked prior wills - prior wills will have no effect

Directions as to the Optional
disposal of the body

Appointment of An executor / executrix
executors -​ The person who deals with the testator’s affairs after their death
-​ Collects testator’s assets
-​ Pays debts and inheritance tax

Authority to act
-​ Executors will apply to HMCTS for a grant of probate to confrim that the will
is valid and that the executor has authority to act

Gifts Specific gift



1

, -​ A gift of a specific item which the testator owns which is distinguished in
the will from the rest of the testator’s assets

General gift:
-​ A gift of items corresponding to a description
-​ If the testator does not own the items at death the executor must obtain the
items using funds obtained from the estate

Demonstrative girft
-​ A gift general in nature but directed to be paid from a specific fund

Pecuniary gift
-​ A gift of money

Residuary gift
-​ Comprises all the money and property left after the testator’s debts have
been paid

Requirements for a 1.​ Capacity
valid will 2.​ Intention
3.​ Formalities under WA 1837

Capacity The test:
-​ Individual must be 18 or over
-​ Must have mental capacity (soundness of mind, memory and
understanding - Banks v Goodfellow)

Capacity: -
-​ The testator must understand
-​ The nature of their act and its effects
-​ The extent of their property
-​ The moral claims they ought to consider
-​ The testator must not be suffering from any insane delusion which affects
the disposition of property

General rule Testators must have capacity at the time they execute their wills

Exception: Parker v Felgate
-​ A will can be valid if the testator has capacity when they give instructions
for the will even if they lose capacity by the time the will is executed

MCA 2005 Test for capacity
-​ If the testator is mentally incapable of making a will a statutory will may be
made on their behalf under MCA
-​ The Court of Protection will approve a draft will only if it is the testator’s
best interest

Golden rule If the testator lacks capacity the will is void
-​ The solicitor shoudl ask a medical practitioner to provide a written report
confirming the testator’s capacity (Kenward v Adams)



2

,Presumption of capacity There is a presumption that the testator satisfies the mental capcity test

When does the presumption apply
-​ If the will is rational on its face and teh testator showed no evidence of
mental confusion before making the will

Burden of proof The general rule:
-​ The person who is asserting that a will is valid has to prove it

Exception:
-​ The presumption applies

If the presumption applies:
-​ The burden is shifted on the challenger to prove a lack of capacity

Intention The testator must have both general and specific intention

General rule The testator must intend to make a will
-​ Must know and approve of the will’s contents at the time when the will is
executed

Exception:
-​ Parker v Felgate exception applies

Burden of proof General rule:
-​ The person asserting that a will is valid has to prove it

Exception:
-​ Presumption of knowledge and approval​

Presumption of A testator who has capacity and has read and executed the will is presumed to
knowledge and have the requisite knowledge and approval
approval
When does the presumption not apply:
-​ Testator is blind / illiterate / the will is not signed properly
-​ HMCTS will require evidence to prove knowledge and approval
before granting a probate
-​ A statement can be included at the end of the will stating that the
will has been read to the testator
-​ Suspicious circumstances
-​ The presumption does not apply if there are suspicious
circumstances surrounding the drafting or execution of the will
-​ The beneficiary preparing the will results in suspicious behaviour
(Wintle v Nye)

Force, fear, fraud, and Where a testator with capacity appears to have known and approved the contents
undue influence of the will - anyone challenging the will must prove one of the following:
-​ Force or fear (through actual or threatened injury)
-​ Fraud (misled by someone)
-​ Undue influence (intolerable pressure)



3

, Mistake Mistake:
-​ The presumption of knowledge and approval does not apply if all or part of
the will was included by mistake
-​ Any words included without the testator’s knowledge or approval will be
omitted from probate

Formalities fo s9 WA 1837: the will must be:
execution -​ In writing
-​ Signed by the testator
-​ The testator must have intended to give effect tot he will by his signature
-​ The signature must be witnessed by atleast 2 witnesses

The will must be in Any kind of signature is acceptable provided the testator intends the signature to
writing and signed represent their name

Another person signing:
-​ Another person is allowed to sign the will on the testator’s behalf in the
testator’s presence and at their direction
-​ The testator must give the person a positive direction that they want the
person to sign on their behalf

The testator must have It is not enough for the will simply to have a signature
intended to give effect -​ It must appear that the testator intended that his signature would cause the
to the will by his will to take effect
signature

The signature must be The 2 witnesses must be present at the same time
witnessed -​ They must sign the will in the presence of the testator
-​ Must see the testator signing the document

Acknoweldging the signature
-​ Means that the person confrims that the signature is theris

If the witness is a beneficiary under the will or the spouse of the beneficiary
-​ The will remains valid but the gift to the witness or to the spouse fails (s15)

Exception to the A will made on actual military service may be in any form including a mere oral
formalities statement (s11)

The burden of proof General rule:
-​ The person asserting the will is valid has the burden

Exception:
-​ Presumption of due execution

The presumption:
-​ Arises if the will includes an attestation clause
-​ Means that the formalities were observed
-​ Shifts the burden of proof on the person challenging the validity of the will
-​ If the will does not include an attestation clause



4

Document information

Uploaded on
August 1, 2025
Number of pages
38
Written in
2025/2026
Type
SUMMARY
£11.49
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
hooraleen02

Also available in package deal

Thumbnail
Package deal
SQE 1 Revision Notes (FLK1 & FLK 2)
-
1 13 2025
£ 116.37 More info

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
hooraleen02 University of Law (London)
View profile
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
3
Member since
7 months
Number of followers
0
Documents
13
Last sold
5 months ago

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Trending documents

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these revision notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No problem! You can straightaway pick a different document that better suits what you're after.

Pay as you like, start learning straight away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and smashed it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions