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Death of a Joint Executor before Probate completed

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  • Death of a Joint Executor before Probate completed

    My wife is joint executor, together with her stepsister, of her late stepfather's estate. He died 5 years ago. She is also sole executor of her late mother's estate, who died this year. The home owned by her mother and stepfather was held as tenants in common in equal shares. Grant of Representation has been issued for both estates this year.

    She is in the early stages of selling the now vacant home the deceased lived in, having accepted a buyer's offer and completed initial TA6 & TA10 property forms. The conveyancing solicitors said they would deal with her alone as her mother died after the stepfather, something that confused me somewhat. I had assumed that the stepsister, as joint executor of the stepfather's estate, would still have had some say in things, but that is what they said in their letter.

    Anyway, her stepsister (and joint executor) recently died. Google suggests the remaining executor can carry on acting, but the Grant of Representation for that estate will need to be reissued reflecting just my wife as now sole executor. I'm looking for some confirmation that Google is correct, that the buyer's solicitor will indeed require this (rather than just proof of death of the joint executor) and any idea of how long that might take and at what cost? If so, I assume I contact the probate registry with death certificate for the joint executor, and pay some admin fee?
    Tags: None

  • #2
    From what I have read I am not sure your last paragraph is correct

    If your wife's stepsister had a will then the named executor in her will takes over the role of joint executor to the stepfather's estate.

    There is no requirement for this potential new executor to apply for probate

    This executor may decide to renounce their executor duties but should be offered the executor role

    The stepfather owned a share in the property being sold so his share of the proceeds of the sale should follow his will

    The conveyancing solicitor your wife appointed would not have wanted to correspond with 2 executors which is understandable to avoid any duplication

    If the stepfather's share of the property didn't pass to your mother-in-law then the owner or owners that inherited his share will have to sign transfer forms (coordinated through your wife)

    This is complicated and I could be wrong. Hopefully another forum user will confirm or disagree
    Last edited by Pezza54; Yesterday, 13:03:PM.

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    • #3
      The wife of the stepfather only had a 'right to remain' in the house after her husband died; his Will then passed his share to his children of a previous marriage. That Will of the stepfather appointed three executors. One (his surviving wife) was declared incapable, and later died. It also named his daughter and my wife as executors. These two obtained probate this year, jointly. That daughter (my wife's step sister) recently died.

      As probate was already issued when the stepsister died, does my wife as sole surviving executor need to do anything to continue to act in the house sale? The house share belonging to the late husband has not been transferred to my knowledge yet, it should have been put in the names of the executors as trustees, I believe.

      I was surprised that the conveyancer had any choice in involving the stepsister/joint executor when she was alive, though this point appears academic since she died. The immediate question is whether my wife can continue to act as sole surviving executor in the stepfather's Will, or whether she must contact the probate registry?

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      • #4
        Did the stepsister have a will? If she did who was named executor?

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        • #5
          I don't know. The death was quite unexpected, and she was financially troubled, so quite possibly not. But how would such a Will effect the inheritance from her father's estate, which specified what he left to his children passing to their children in the event of death? This is already the case with the late brother of the stepsister, whose children will inherit his share, our solicitor said.

          Comment


          • #6
            The stepsister's shared ownership of the property needs to pass under the terms of her will or by the rules of intestacy if she didn't leave a will
            The new owner or owners with a share of the property will have to sign property transfer forms

            Comment

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