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Full-Text Articles in Law

Cross-Border Attestation And Interjurisdictional Wills, Richard F. Storrow Jun 2021

Cross-Border Attestation And Interjurisdictional Wills, Richard F. Storrow

ACTEC Law Journal

After nearly two years of difficult effort to contain the coronavirus outbreak, remoteness is firmly embedded in the American psyche. Throughout the country, emergency orders permitting will execution and attestation to be conducted by simultaneous audio-visual transmission have allowed estate planning to proceed. There are currently bills in some state legislatures to make permanent the temporary emergency measures adopted during the pandemic. Remote execution and attestation may be here to stay, even in a world where electronic wills remain rare. This article addresses what is likely to become a more familiar manner of will execution in a post-pandemic world and …


Trusts And Estates -- Pour-Over Wills -- Bequest To Subsequently Amended Trust Upheld Under Doctrine Of Independent Significance, David Finkleman Jun 1961

Trusts And Estates -- Pour-Over Wills -- Bequest To Subsequently Amended Trust Upheld Under Doctrine Of Independent Significance, David Finkleman

Michigan Law Review

Testator created an inter vivos trust, reserving a power to amend or revoke. Thereafter, he executed his will which left the residue of his estate to the trustee to be used according to the terms of the trust. Subsequently, testator executed an unattested instrument which altered the beneficial interests in the trust property. At testator's death, his executor petitioned the probate court for instructions whether the residue passed according to the trust's original terms, its amended terms, or whether the bequest failed, resulting in intestacy. On certification to the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts, held, there was an effective …


Wills - Execution - Attestation, Max H. Bergman Jan 1957

Wills - Execution - Attestation, Max H. Bergman

Michigan Law Review

Prospective witnesses to a will saw the testatrix standing in an adjoining room engaged in writing. Soon thereafter, the testatrix asked them to come in and sign a paper. Her name had already been written on the document, and she neither signed it in the witnesses' presence nor in any manner indicated the writing to be her will. The witnesses read enough of the document, however, to know it was a will, before subscribing it in the presence of the testatrix and one another. Three of the testatrix' sons objected to the probate of the will on the ground that …