Religion & Spirituality1 min ago
will
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No best answer has yet been selected by billybeaver. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I am sure a will is a public document and is available for anyone to see.
If you ask her nicely and she will still not show you it then I am afraid you may need to get a solicitor to write her a formal letter saying if she will not show it then you are taking her to court.
It is not nice for me to suggest that, but if asking nicely does not work you have to resort to the law.
It is sad that things like this happen while you are still grieving for your father
There is a bit about wills here
http://www.lawsociety.org.uk/choosingandusing/commonlegalproblems.law
If it was a proper will then it will have had two executors (people whose job it is to make sure the wishes in the will are carried out).
Ask your mother who the executors are.
It will also have to be signed by your father and other witnesses to be a legal will. Ask your stepmother who the witnesses were.
It may be he did not leave a will and your stepmother is worried that she may lose the house or whatever.
If that is the case it still needs to come out in the open.
If your father had a solicitor it is very likely that they have a copy of the will (often 2 copies are made) so see if they have one.
More about wills here
http://www.adviceguide.org.uk/index/family_parent/family/wills.htm
I would go to the CAB (Citizens Advice Bureaux)
They can't close bank accounts unless it was in joint names.They need a Grant of Probate and to obtain one they would need to go to your nearest Probate Office with the will and register it. It is then a public document and can be viewed.
If your father was married to your stepmother and I guess she was then she is entitiled to
the 'personal chattels' (see 'Terms used in wills and probate matters');
the first �125,000; and
a life interest in half of what is left (for example, the income or interest if the money is invested). The capital (the original amount) passes to their children when the surviving husband or wife dies.
any solicitor worth his salt would have advised your dad to make provisions for his own children, not just give it all to her and expect her to take care of kids who aren't hers.
he would have wanted you looked after
sounds like she is trying it on, but i would go to see his solicitor - as his children you have rights to see the will
If the will shows that is what the deceased intended, then that's it. A person can dispose of his or her property however they like.
If a will wasn't left - the wife automatically gets the first �125,000 plus personal possessions.
If the house was owned jointly this automatically becomes hers, similarly with joint bank accounts.
I do hope it all gets sorted, billy.