Will
Introduction
Will is a legal declaration of the intention of a testator
through testamentary instrument with respect to his property, which he desires
to be carried into effect after his death. It includes codicil and
every document in writing making a voluntary posthumous disposition of
property. A Will is ambulatory which may be amended or revoked during the
lifetime of the testator of the Will.
The Andhra Pradesh High Court held that contents of the Will
must indicate that it is intended to come into effect after death of testator
and that it is revocable at any time prior to his death and a document cannot
be treated as a Will by a mere reading of the heading of it; [Mandakini Naik v
G.K. Naik, 2004 (3) ALT 829 (AP HC)].
A legacy through the Will lapses where the legatee dies before
the testator. For instance, A makes a bequest of certain property in favour of
B. However, B dies before A. The bequest, then, cannot naturally take effect
and the legacy is said to have lapsed.
A legatee is liable to the creditors. He is liable to refund the
legacy that he has received, irrespective of whether the assets of the
testator’s estate are sufficient or not at the time of death of the testator to
pay both debts and the legacies, as well as irrespective of whether the payment
of legacy by the executor is voluntary or not.
A great weight is given to the wordings of a Will. A full effect
must be given which is main part of operative portion of a Will in the light of
declared wish of the testator as well as other provision of the Will. The court
in any way has to interpret the words in their both ordinary and grammatical
sense and simultaneously to give weight if there is absurdity or inconsistency.
Hence, the whole of words should be taken together without any surmise in the light
of the intention of testator. Where the maker includes additional words or
phrases then it shall mean additional meaning. In order to ascertain the very
material purpose of the Will, the court has to go through each and every word
used by the testator in a Will.
Necessity
Most of the people would like to dispose of their property
according to their own wishes through a Will. A Will after death of person,
reduces the confusion of sharing property amongst the family members and
relatives.
In case a person dies without making a Will, he is said to have
died intestate. His property shall be inherited to his legal heirs in
accordance with the personal law applicable to him i.e. The Hindu Succession
Act, 1956, The Indian Succession Act, 1925, un-codified law of
Muslims, Parsis etc.
Types of Wills:
1. Privileged and unprivileged Wills: Wills executed according to section 63 of the Indian Succession
Act, 1925 are called unprivileged Wills and Wills executed according to section
66 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 by a soldier or airman or mariner
employed in an expedition or engaged in actual warfare are called privileged
Wills.
2. Conditional or contingent Wills: A will may be expressed to take effect only in the event
of the happening of some contingency or condition, and if the contingency does
not happen or the condition fails, the Will is not legally enforceable. A
conditional will is void if the condition imposed is unlawful.
3. Joint Wills: A
joint Will is a testamentary instrument whereby two or more persons agree to
make a conjoint Will. Where a Will is joint, and is intended to take effect
after the death of both, it will not be enforceable during the lifetime of
either. Joint Wills are revocable at anytime by either of the testators during
their joint lives, or after death of one, by the survivor.
A Will executed by two or more testators as a single document
duly executed by each testator disposing of his separate properties or his
joint properties is not a single Will. It operates on the death of each and is
in effect for two or more Wills, on the death of each testator, the legatee
would become entitled to the properties of the testator who dies.
4. Mutual Wills: A Will is mutual
when two testators confer upon each other reciprocal benefits by either of them
constituting the other his legatee. But when the legatees are distinct from the
testators, there can be no position for Mutual Wills.
5. Duplicate Wills: A
testator, for the sake of safety, may make a Will in duplicate, one to be kept
by him and the other to be deposited in the safe custody with a bank or
executor or trustee. If the testator mutilates or destroys the one which is in
his custody it is revocation of both.
6. Concurrent Wills: Generally, a man should leave only one Will at the time of his
death. However, for the sake of convenience a testator may dispose of some
properties in one country by one Will and the other properties in another
country by a separate Will.
7. Sham Wills: If a
document is deliberately executed with all due formalities purporting to be a
Will, it will still be nullity if it can be shown that the testator did not
intend it to have any testamentary operation, but was to have only some
collateral object. One thing must be borne in mind that the intention to make
the Will is essential for the validity of the Will.
8. Holograph Wills: Such
Wills are written entirely in the handwriting of the testator.
What can be bequeathed in a Will
All properties, movable or immovable of which the testator is
the owner and which are transferable can be disposed of by a Will. Property
which is not legally transferable cannot be bequeathed. If a person has only a
life-interest in a property, he cannot make a Will in respect of it. A Hindu
governed by Mitakshara law can bequeath his interest in the joint family
property to any person he desires by means of a Will. But a female Hindu, in
all cases, is entitled to dispose of her property without any restriction. In
case of leasehold property, so long as lease does not expire, the bequest is
effective. If the lease expires during the lifetime of a testator, no bequest
is made.
The testator has no right to bequeath all the assets to an
institution or a trust leaving his family and dependants in poverty and
deprivation. The member’s of the testator’s family are entitled to claim maintenance
from the estate of the testator.
Who can make a Will
According to section 5 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 every
person of sound mind and not being a minor may dispose of his property by Will.
Proof and effect of Will
Probate is a certificate issued by court on the application of
the executor appointed by a Will to the effect that the Will is valid. It is
also the official evidence of the executor’s right to administer the estate of
a deceased person.
Executor is a person to whom the execution of the last Will of a
deceased person is, by the testator’s appointment, confided.
Letters of administration is granted when a person who had
executed a legally valid Will dies without having named an executor and on
application by one of the beneficiaries named in the Will. The procedure for
grant of Letters of administration is more or less similar to that for the
grant of probate.
To establish a right of an estate under the Will, a probate or
Letters of administration granted by a competent court needs to be attached.
Execution of wills
Section 63 of the Indian Succession Act, 1925 provides that
every testator other than a soldier or an airman or a mariner employed in an
expedition or engaged in actual warfare must execute his Will according to the
following rules:
He must sign or must affix his mark to the Will, or it must be signed
by some other person in his presence and by his direction; and the signature or
the mark of the testator, or the signature of the person signing for him, must
be so placed that it shall appear that it was intended thereby to give effect
to the writing as a Will. It is further provided that the Will must be attested
by two or more witnesses, each of whom has seen the testator sign or affix his
mark to the Will or has seen some other person sign the Will, in the presence
and by the direction of the testator, or has received from the testator a
personal acknowledgement of his signature or mark, or of the signature of such
other person; and each of such witnesses must sign the Will in the presence of
the testator, but it is not necessary that more than one witness should be
present at the same time. No particular form of attestation is necessary.
Applicability of Indian Evidence Act, 1872
The provisions of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, apply to Wills
as to other documents and the court may draw the presumption under it in
deciding whether the Will has been properly attested or not.
The Executor
The executor is the most important person in the Will. Executor
is defined in the Indian Succession Act, 1925, as a person to whom the
execution of the last Will of a deceased person, is by the testator’s
appointment confided. An executor is charged with the duty and conferred with
the power to carry out the directions contained in the Will. He has to collect
and realize the estate of the deceased, pay his debts and distribute the
legacies.
The executor shall file the petition for obtaining probate of
the Will. The court shall grant probate only to an executor who has been named
in the Will.
The executor should not be minor. The executor should be younger
than testator in age so that there is greater possibility of his outliving or
surviving the testator.
Administrator
In case the deceased has not appointed an executor then the
court shall appoint one. Also in case the executor is incapable of or refuses
to act or has predeceased the testator or the executor dies after having proved
the Will but before administering all the estates of the deceased, the court
shall appoint an administrator at the instance of interested person or persons.
Registration of Will
Registration of a Will is purely an optional
matter. It is not compulsory at all. No inference can be drawn by the Court or
any authority about the genuineness of a Will on the ground of its
non-registration. Nor a Will can be accepted as genuine by courts even though
it has been registered.
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