Probate-Estate Planning and Administration FAQUnderstanding Intestacy: When You Die Without a WillStudies indicate that many persons who have accumulated wealth during their lifetime die without a valid will. When this happens, the decedent's property passes by intestate succession to the decedent's heirs at law according to law. In other words, if you don't have a will, the state will make one for you. All fifty states have laws of this sort. The purpose of intestate succession statutes is to distribute the decedent's wealth in a manner that closely represents how the average person would have designed his or her estate plan had that person had a will. However, this default can differ dramatically from what the person really would have wanted. Even where is it is known what the person intended, no exceptions are made where no valid will exists. Nor are there any exceptions made based on need or special circumstances. 1990 Uniform Probate CodeThe 1990 Uniform Probate Code (the Code), which serves as the starting point for many states' laws, represents the best reference for a general discussion. However, it should be kept in mind that the laws of different states vary greatly from each other and from the Code itself. Under the Code, close relatives take priority over more distant relatives. The classes of relatives whose members receive property under the Code include the decedent's surviving spouse, descendents (children, grandchildren, etc.), parents, descendents of decedent's parents (siblings, nieces and nephews), grandparents, and descendents of grandparents (aunts and uncles and cousins). Adopted descendents are treated the same as biological descendents. If none of the above-named classes of relatives include any persons qualified to take the estate, the property "escheats" (goes by default) to the state.
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