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Instructing an expert in an estate challenge - lessons from the Green case capacity deceased estate estate estate planning supreme court Nov 20, 2024

Complexities can arise in disputes over wills and estate management, particularly when questions of testamentary capacity and undue influence are at the heart of the proceedings. In reviewing the recent Supreme Court case of Green v Green [2024] NSWSC 1442 below, we will explore the...

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Statutory wills - for when testamentary capacity is lacking capacity estate planning estates family provision intestacy statutory will succession act supreme court wills Sep 08, 2020

Division 2 (in particular, section 18) of the Succession Act 2006(NSW) allows the Court to authorise wills to be made, altered or revoked for persons who do not have testamentary capacity , whilst they are still alive (s18(3)) – this includes a minor who does not have the capacity...

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A "free and capable testator" - when capacity is questioned capacity estate planning estates wills Sep 21, 2017

The recent case of Ryan v Dalton highlights the role of testamentary capacity when making a will.  The case emphasised that there is a burden on the proponent of the will to demonstrate to the court that the last will created was made by a “free and capable” testator.

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When a deceased drastically changes their will just prior to their death capacity deathbed wills estate planning estates family provision Feb 11, 2016

When there are drastic changes in the content of the will of a deceased just prior to their death, a number of potential issues arise which need to be addressed in the administration of the deceased’s estate.  It is not uncommon for so called “deathbed wills” to be...

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