Sorry, this is my first time posting, and may be long and complicated.
My Dad recently died. He had been terminally ill but caught an infection and died quite suddenly. He had been in the process of changing his will and had had a telephone consultation and received papers but had not got them signed due to Covid and health issues.
The background is that my Dad is a father of two (to me and my half-sibling). We were all estranged until me and my half sibling were in our teams and even then contact was sporadic. When I reached 30, my Dad and I had much more regular contact spanning the past 10 years. When my Dad realised he was ill, he wanted to change his will to me being the sole beneficiary - however he wanted to cut my half-sibling out and was clear about this to the solicitor.
When he passed away, the solicitor called me to say they had never received a signed copy of my Dad's recent will so they would legally go with his previous will from the early 2000s. In this will he left everything to his parents, who are still alive. Solicitor flatly told me that me and my half sibling would be unable to contest this.
My point is, I am always hearing about descendants contesting wills...so is this information correct ?
When I thought I would be the sole beneficiary I was well prepared for my half-sibling contesting it (and rightfully so) and I would have been more than happy to split - even though it wasn't wasn't's wishes. So is it right that we are unable to contest the will or is the solicitor (who is a good friend of my Dad's parents) just trying to deter this happening ?
My Dad recently died. He had been terminally ill but caught an infection and died quite suddenly. He had been in the process of changing his will and had had a telephone consultation and received papers but had not got them signed due to Covid and health issues.
The background is that my Dad is a father of two (to me and my half-sibling). We were all estranged until me and my half sibling were in our teams and even then contact was sporadic. When I reached 30, my Dad and I had much more regular contact spanning the past 10 years. When my Dad realised he was ill, he wanted to change his will to me being the sole beneficiary - however he wanted to cut my half-sibling out and was clear about this to the solicitor.
When he passed away, the solicitor called me to say they had never received a signed copy of my Dad's recent will so they would legally go with his previous will from the early 2000s. In this will he left everything to his parents, who are still alive. Solicitor flatly told me that me and my half sibling would be unable to contest this.
My point is, I am always hearing about descendants contesting wills...so is this information correct ?
When I thought I would be the sole beneficiary I was well prepared for my half-sibling contesting it (and rightfully so) and I would have been more than happy to split - even though it wasn't wasn't's wishes. So is it right that we are unable to contest the will or is the solicitor (who is a good friend of my Dad's parents) just trying to deter this happening ?
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