Re: Flexible Life Interest Trust In Will
Hi again,
Sorry you’ve had issues getting back on, but we got there in the end!
Ok, so if you revert to joint tenants at any point before the first of you passes away, then the property will automatically pass to the survivor of you when the time comes. So neither of you would have a specified ‘share’ of the property that can be put into the trust on death for the life time of the survivor. The rest of your wills would be valid the life interest trust just wouldn’t happen as there is nothing to go into it to set it up so to speak.
I hope that clarifies things if not do ask and I can try and explain it another way.
Your next query would it have to be the same solicitor who prepared the wills that would prepare the deed. If you are tenants in common currently and there is no deed in place then the assumption would be that you each have 50% share of the property that you can then will to whoever you want when the time comes. You would need a deed preparing, only if you were going to hold the property in unequal shares, otherwise a deed wouldn’t be necessary.
If a deed were necessary, then it doesn’t have to be prepared by the same person who prepared the will but I think you need to get it straight what you are trying to achieve here as talk of deeds when you mention reverting to joint tenants is causing some confusion. If joint tenants is what you want to do, then a deed would be unnecessary. You can contact the Land Registry yourself to deal with this if needs be and may be worth considering once you have decided exactly what you wish to achieve.
Are you considering leaving your wills as they are rather than changing them? I may have misunderstood but am unsure why you would go to the expense of preparing new wills that include a flexible life interest trust if you don’t intend using it?
Sorry done the same again more questions, but hopefully we can get to the bottom of what you want to do and point you in the right direction.
Hi again,
Sorry you’ve had issues getting back on, but we got there in the end!
Ok, so if you revert to joint tenants at any point before the first of you passes away, then the property will automatically pass to the survivor of you when the time comes. So neither of you would have a specified ‘share’ of the property that can be put into the trust on death for the life time of the survivor. The rest of your wills would be valid the life interest trust just wouldn’t happen as there is nothing to go into it to set it up so to speak.
I hope that clarifies things if not do ask and I can try and explain it another way.
Your next query would it have to be the same solicitor who prepared the wills that would prepare the deed. If you are tenants in common currently and there is no deed in place then the assumption would be that you each have 50% share of the property that you can then will to whoever you want when the time comes. You would need a deed preparing, only if you were going to hold the property in unequal shares, otherwise a deed wouldn’t be necessary.
If a deed were necessary, then it doesn’t have to be prepared by the same person who prepared the will but I think you need to get it straight what you are trying to achieve here as talk of deeds when you mention reverting to joint tenants is causing some confusion. If joint tenants is what you want to do, then a deed would be unnecessary. You can contact the Land Registry yourself to deal with this if needs be and may be worth considering once you have decided exactly what you wish to achieve.
Are you considering leaving your wills as they are rather than changing them? I may have misunderstood but am unsure why you would go to the expense of preparing new wills that include a flexible life interest trust if you don’t intend using it?
Sorry done the same again more questions, but hopefully we can get to the bottom of what you want to do and point you in the right direction.
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