Will Revocations
Will Revocations Continued
Ambiguity
Other Will Matters
Continued
100

What can be revoked by a will?

Any part(s) of will 

All of the will 

100

Texas Approach on Revival

No revival of wills in Texas so it goes through intestacy 

100

Patent Ambiguity 

ambiguous on its face and does not convey a sensible meaning to the reader 

100

Fact of Independent Significance 

Tells us when we can look outside the four corners of the will to ascertain at death property distribution 

100

Dead Person's Statute Issue:

Can evidence of what testator said or did beused as evidence in will litigation

200

Texas Approach of Partial Revocation by Physical Act

Texas does not have partial revocations. We are an all or nothing state
200

What is republication 

treating an old will if it was executed later 

200

How does something pass if there is a blank space?

CL and Modern law would likely be unwilling to permit extrinsic evidence so pass through the residual clause 

200

Precatory Language

A serious request but is not legally binding 

"I hope", "I would like", "I wish" 

200

Presumption on Contents

contents of specifically gifted items presumed NOT included with gift

300

Requirements for Revocation by Physical Act

1. Mental Capacity 

2. Revocation Intent 

3. Physical Act --> by testator or proxy in presence 

4. Concurrence of first three requirements 

300

How does Court determine when to use DRR (Doctrine of Dependent Relative Revocation)?       

                                   


    

The more similar will 1 & 2, the more likely they only would have revoked will 1 if will 2 is valid 

300

Definition of No apparent ambiguity 

the meaning is clear but would extrinsic evidence be used to create an ambiguity 

300

Types of Trusts into which pour overs allowed

1. Trust created by testator, even if after will execution 

2. Trust created by another person, even if after will execution 

3. Trust not yet in existence at date of testator's death due to lack of funding as long as trust is --> in writing and identified in the will 

300

Tangible Personal Property Document 

Not recognized in Texas because it is not a will, attested, or holographic. Cannot be incorporated 

400

Will Revocation by Operation of Law 

Murder 

Ademption 

Divorce

Pretermitted Children 

Lapse 

Failure to Survive 

Void Marriage 

400

Presumption of multiple originals 

If one cannot locate all the originals, testator destroyed "extra" originals realizing the wisdom of having only one original 

400

Can you use extrinsic evidence with Latent Ambiguity? 

Yes, 

See this in Hultquist v Ring -- Beneficiary misdescription & In re Estate of Cohorn -- Property misdescription 

400

Burial Plots

May devise a burial plot but it must be specifically mentioned. If not, spouse gets one and the rest got to heirs

400

When does a class close?

The Rule of Convenience: Earlier of 

1. Natural closing of class (no way to open it) 

2. when first class member entitled to property 

500
Statutory Burden on Revocation

The applicant for probate of a will must prove testator did not revoke the will by preponderance of the evidence 

500

How to prove the contents of a will? 

By testimony of someone who: 

1. Read the will 

2. Heard the will read aloud

3. Can identify a copy 

500

How did the Texas Legislature overturn San Antonio Area Foundation v Lang

They added in the estates code how judicial modification and reformation may take place. Places limitations on bringing evidence on no-apparent ambiguity 

500

9/1/1979

In Contractual wills, express provisions in will stating that 

- contract exists; 

- the material terms of the K, 

- does not have to say contract "mutually in consideration" and "agree we cannot revoke without the written consent of the other" 

500

Texas Rule of Evidence 601 (b) 

Only parties to lawsuit might fit within the rule 

Applies only if action by or against a personal representative 

Oral statements of the testator are excluded from evidence