Body & Soul1 min ago
Will revision
My will was so arranged that on my death, the estate would be equally divided between my son & daughter. When my son was going through a lengthy divorce process, I was concerned that had I passed on during this period, his wife could claim a share of his inheritance. To prevent this, I temporarily disinherited my son so that the whole estate would pass to by daughter and a will was drawn up to this effect.
Now that the divorce has been settled, I wish to revert to the conditions laid out in the previous will, a copy of which I still have. To avoid the expense of yet another will, could I not just destroy the last will?. The solicitor who drew up both wills, will of course have copies. Any advice would be much appreciated.
Now that the divorce has been settled, I wish to revert to the conditions laid out in the previous will, a copy of which I still have. To avoid the expense of yet another will, could I not just destroy the last will?. The solicitor who drew up both wills, will of course have copies. Any advice would be much appreciated.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Being in a similar situation in that I changed my will and now want the original back again, I have advised the solicitor to do this. A copy of the will is registered somewhere and I suspect that if the amended will is registered it will over ride just destroying a copy of it in your possession. Best to be safe than sorry I reckon.
No! If you destroy the last Will, it is revoked. That doesn't mean that you revert to the previous Will because that would need to be expressly unrevoked (or revived is the better word). If you just did that you would die intestate.
You CAN revive a revoked Will but at the same time you must also revoke the second Will.
A revoked Will can be revived by re-execution (this won't solve the problem of revoking the second Will). The second way of doing it is to make a codicil which EXPRESSLY revokes the second Will and revives the first Will. Personally, I would just make a new one since this area is one that has "cock up" written all over it.
You CAN revive a revoked Will but at the same time you must also revoke the second Will.
A revoked Will can be revived by re-execution (this won't solve the problem of revoking the second Will). The second way of doing it is to make a codicil which EXPRESSLY revokes the second Will and revives the first Will. Personally, I would just make a new one since this area is one that has "cock up" written all over it.