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freddie

legal question.. probate

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Hi .If probate has been signed off by the court as complete in one county in UK, is it legally binding in all counties?.

 

young friend has had a rough time , as his grandad left him everything, and his Aunt is being a pain, and is contesting the will big time, but probate has been signed off. The aunts no win no fee lot reckon they posted objection 3 days before, in another (long way away ) county. Young freind is terrified, and cannot really afford to keep going to solicitors at £200 an hr. YF is 19. GD brought him up. He's a very decent young person, and I'm his In case of emergency. Gd died in his arms at 17 half, as GD wanted to be at home. Aunt and birth mother are not nice persons. at least birth mother is not contesting, but she's not helping either. Aunt and birth mother are sisters. Neither helped at all when their parent was ill and had no inerest in helping raise YF.

Will was properly drawn at solicitors,, but YF was under 18 at time of GD death.

any sound advice would help. we are going to seek app with solicitors, but want to find out as much as poss before we go in, so we know what questions to ask

Thanks

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I will find out for you one of my relatives will know but,,,hopefully someone will come along.

 

I think your solicitor is charging hell of a lot! Most will give good advice prior to taking a case on.

 

As long as the grandad made a proper will with his express wishes particularly via solicitor etc she will find it hard to contest it unless she was dependant on him in someway?

 

indie :)

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I hate it when families get to this point - but that is human's for you I guess.

 

I can't advise at all - but wondered if the Citizens Advice Bureau could help? They are so good and free, if you are just after advice?

 

They wouldn't be able to act for you or anything, but could maybe advise on your YF's rights and what next options could be.

 

Money - route of all evil I am sure. :evil:

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All probate does is put the will in the public domain so that anybody can look at it and gives the executors the wherewithal to distribute the funds.

CAB is a good idea to get your rights and questions sorted out but if the will is being legally contested you will need proper legal representation.

The age your YF was at the time of death is neither here nor there. You can leave a fortune to a baby or even your cat.

I do hope it works out OK; such a terrible thing to be worried about after losing a loved one.

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No expert but I handled the probate when my mum passed away without leaving a will I applied and I hold the grant of representation to dispose of her Estate as I see fit. My brother & sister could contest my decisions but that's another matter.

 

As far as my understanding of probate If there was a will and it was properly drawn and witnessed it is legally binding no matter what its contents are or who it benefits.

 

Unless :twisted: Auntie can prove that GD had it drawn up whilst not in sound mind & body

or that he was coerced then she is on a hiding to nothing and simply trying to be mean and use scare tactics hoping he will give in and share :twisted: unless GF left a substansial fortune it would cost them more to contest it than they would probably gain.

 

Hold firm young man and think if GD had wanted to leave anything to Mum or Auntie he would have done :!::!::!:

 

Serves them right what goes around comes around :)

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Mr Wolfie here, for my sins I work in IHT/Probate office. If you have obtained the Grant of Probate, the form would have the seal embossed in the right hand corner, this means the Probate Office accepts your friend as being the Legal Personal Representative of the estate and entrusts him to administer the estate according to the Will. The Grant of Probate is the passport to access all the assets such as bank accounts. All financial bodies will ask to see a copy of the Grant before they will release funds. No matter which Probate office he attended the Grant is valid nationwide.

It can be assumed that no body has objected to the Probate office before the Grant was issued, otherwise the objection would have had to be heard before the Grant could be issued. He should only seek further advice if he receives something official from the Probate office. The bottom line is he has the legal status and authority to deal with the estate, and no one can interfere with this right.

The objection would have to based on evidence of either another Will or on dependency, if no one was living off the dec'd funds, and without provisions from the estate they would have to seek help from benefits, then if they are out of education age any claim for dependency would fail.

I'm afraid where money is involved families want their share, it is something I see and hear everyday. People say a lot of things in the hope of getting something. If he has the Grant he has the authority and there is no need to pay for further legal advice unless he hears further from the Probate office.

If he is really worried about what may have happened, if he contacts the Probate office he attended they should be able to confirm/deny if a claim has been made and explain fully what the Grant means.

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Hi .If probate has been signed off by the court as complete in one county in UK, is it legally binding in all counties?.

 

young friend has had a rough time , as his grandad left him everything, and his Aunt is being a pain, and is contesting the will big time, but probate has been signed off. The aunts no win no fee lot reckon they posted objection 3 days before, in another (long way away ) county. Young freind is terrified, and cannot really afford to keep going to solicitors at £200 an hr. YF is 19. GD brought him up. He's a very decent young person, and I'm his In case of emergency. Gd died in his arms at 17 half, as GD wanted to be at home. Aunt and birth mother are not nice persons. at least birth mother is not contesting, but she's not helping either. Aunt and birth mother are sisters. Neither helped at all when their parent was ill and had no inerest in helping raise YF.

Will was properly drawn at solicitors,, but YF was under 18 at time of GD death.

any sound advice would help. we are going to seek app with solicitors, but want to find out as much as poss before we go in, so we know what questions to ask

Thanks

 

At his age unless he's doing something unusual he's probably eligible for legal aid.

 

Try here to find a legal aid solicitor.

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