Giving the executor legal standing is essential in order to provide assurance and protection to those who are keeping cash for the deceased or who want to purchase property from the Executor. If you spent on a house only to find out that the executor named in the will had really created a more recent will, in which case you were no longer entitled to the property, you wouldn't be happy. A bank holding £50,000 might not be pleased if it emerged out the person it had given the deceased's money to wasn't actually entitled.
How does one go about
getting a Grant of Probate?
The process of obtaining
the Grant of Probate should be quite straightforward because it is essentially
just a collection of commitments made by the Executor and the cost of grant of probate
is also reasonable. Executors must read a statement per the Non-Contentious
Probate Rules of 2018, which became effective from the month of November 27.
Unfortunately, making a Probate application also requires filing an Inheritance
Tax return with explaining the financial circumstances of the dead as of the
date of death. To ensure that you are correctly filling out all the forms and
providing all the needed relevant information, it is advised to obtain good and
safe expert advice. In order to ensure that all essential procedures have been
taken out there and that there will not be any unpleasant surprises down the
line.
If this method needs to
be followed, wouldn't it be simpler simply not to have a will?