It seems that it is always a good time to review this. The other day a client asked me if an elderly
friend could “dictate” the terms of his will and then sign the transcribed
document. In Tennessee, the answer is
no.
Since 1941,
the law in Tennessee has been that a will must be signed by the testator and
two or more attesting witnesses who must sign as attesting witnesses in the
presence of the testator and in the presence of each other.
The only
significant exception to this is the holographic
will which is defined in Pritchard on
Wills and Administration of Estates (5th Ed.) as “a paper
writing appearing to be the last will of a deceased person, all the material
provisions of which are written in his own handwriting” and “the testator’s name
must have been subscribed to it, or inserted in some part of.” There must be proof by at least two people
that they recognize the deceased’s handwriting.
Note the
important part – all the material provisions must be in the testator’s
own handwriting. This is the part that
seems to get so often overlooked in the age of word processing.
The bottom
line is this – there is nothing wrong with someone writing their own will – but
it must meet all of the requirements of a holographic will. If not, it is completely void. People have
occasionally said to me that they don’t mind the document being void as long as
it expresses their intent, but this is meaningless. If you die without a will
your property passes by the laws of intestate succession—which may or may not
be what you intended. In this era of
online will kits and the like, the crucial distinction between a holographic
will, a properly attested will and a legally void document often gets
overlooked. This is one of those
important times when it just makes good sense to review the terms of the will with an
attorney and have them handle both the preparation and execution of the
document itself.
3 comments:
I was hoping this was going to tell artists how to make sure their estates don't allow someone to create a holographic image of them and put it on stage, or do a tour, after the artist is gone.
Michael, I was trying to work a hologram joke in there but I just couldn't do it. That Tupac stuff is crazy though.
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