Food & Drink3 mins ago
Can We Contest A Will When The Executor Will Not Share The Contents?
Our mother has been coerced into making a will by our youngest sisters husband who named himself as executor. He refuses to share a copy of the will with us (daughter and two sons of mother) and as our Mother lays in bed in a nursing home slowly loosing her life all we receive from our youngest sister and her husband is continual telephone calls telling us not to remove anything from the house because it all has to be sold. This Saturday they told my brother the will was changed this year we don't know if this was a codicil or a new will and they will not confirm. However our mother was medically diagnosed with dementia in June last year so we believe any changes made will be void as she was not of sound mind. Our question is can we contest at this point when we don't know what it says or do we have to wait for it to go though probate before we can contest? We believe our mother would not have wanted everything sold and would have wanted her thirteen grandchildren and ten great grandchildren to have been allowed to have something to remember her by and we certainly don't want the cash that selling the property would raise. Can anyone advise?
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Thanks for the link - helpful. She is still alive but we think she will pass in the next day or so. Our other brother in law has applied for power of attorney and we expect this to come through this week but it will probably be too late. It really is quite devastating that they can't focus on our mother and all they are concerned with is a few hundred pounds!
You can do one of two things.
You can either make an immediate application for a statutory Will (this is a Will made by the Court on your mother's behalf). However, given that she has a recent will this is unlikely to be successful. Given that death is imminent, it is unlikely to be worth it.
Wait until your mother dies, but in the meantime collect as much evidence as you can (witness statements etc). Once she dies, immediately lodge a caveat. Then post again.
You can either make an immediate application for a statutory Will (this is a Will made by the Court on your mother's behalf). However, given that she has a recent will this is unlikely to be successful. Given that death is imminent, it is unlikely to be worth it.
Wait until your mother dies, but in the meantime collect as much evidence as you can (witness statements etc). Once she dies, immediately lodge a caveat. Then post again.
You have had great advice here, I just wanted to add I appreciate how upsetting it is when family behave this way when priorities should be your mothers comfort and peace of mind at this time. As Barmaid has said unfortunately it happens more than we'd like to think, so you're not alone in that. I hope all goes as peacefully as possible for you and your mother until you need to come back for further advice about what happens afterwards. X
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