Donate SIGN UP

Wills

Avatar Image
pinkjudy45 | 08:05 Sat 18th Dec 2021 | Law
2 Answers
My husband and I have Wills that his son is the trustee, we have properties owned as ‘tenants in common’ if we change these properties to ‘joint tenants’ would we have to change our Wills
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 2 of 2rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by pinkjudy45. 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.
If you become joint tenants, neither of you will own a specific share of the properties; it will be your 'partnership' that owns the whole of each of them. So, when one of you dies, those properties won't form part of the deceased partner's estate, meaning that they can't be left to anyone (or to any trust) under the terms of their will. Title to each of those properties, in its entirety, simply passes to the surviving partner.

Therefore any provision in the deceased partner's will that sought to gift the property to a trust would be invalid. However the validity of the rest of their will would remain unchanged.

As it's best not to have invalid terms within a will, it would probably be advisable to re-write them but, as I've said above, your existing wills would remain valid (other than for those parts that deal with the properties) if you didn't do so.
Question Author
Thank you Buenchico for the answer, I thought that may be the case, but needed it confirmed, THANKYOU again x

1 to 2 of 2rss feed

Do you know the answer?

Wills

Answer Question >>