AndyGT
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posted on 16/9/10 at 10:17 PM |
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legal matters
Just looking for some basic legal advice on wills and contesting them. My grand-mother died 6 years ago and before she died her husband, not my
grand-father, was bullying/threatening her (we never got chance to ask to what extent) and was found crying on several occasions. 1 or 2 weeks later
she died but she wanted to change her will. She made one but unfortunately the legal requirements of witnesses etc were not met and she died without
changing her will legally.
Her husband buried my grandma in the same grave as my grand-father and the day or day after the funeral he threw all her family out of the house and
refused us all entry. We thought he was greiving and left him. But a few dats later he was violent towards us and notwanting to look like
"gold-diggers" we left the situation alone and time passed.
We recently discovered that her husband passed away too and has left an estate of over 30,000 pounds to his only daughter in Australia, included in
this is the deeds to the grave where my grand-parents are with space for my parents (2 more places) one day.
Obviously my father is devastated and he has no idea what to do? So, is there something that can be done, if not for the 30,000 pounds estate but at
least for the deeds to our family grave?
Any advice would be kindly welcomed.
Thanks
Andy
nothing is impossible
everything is possible
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Ben_Copeland
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posted on 17/9/10 at 05:36 AM |
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Surely the first port of call would be contacting the daughter in Australia and asking for the deeds to the grave??? I would find it very strange
owning the deeds to someone elses graves and not handing them back to the family they belong too
Ben
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scootz
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posted on 17/9/10 at 06:29 AM |
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^^^my thoughts too^^^
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r1_pete
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posted on 17/9/10 at 07:13 AM |
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Get some proper legal advice, sorry to sound blunt but a lawyer specialising in wills, inheritance etc. is what you need.
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vinny1275
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posted on 17/9/10 at 07:20 AM |
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Check your home insurance - you might have legal cover as part of that - give them a call if so and they can put you onto one of their solicitors for
advice.
HTH
Vince
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200mph
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posted on 17/9/10 at 12:44 PM |
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Unfortunately your question isn't really basic and as advised, you'd be best speaking with a lawyer.
Which country your Grandmother etc lived in are critical too.
Cheers
Mark
If it isn't broke, fix it until it is
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