{"id":1492,"date":"2023-01-27T01:38:41","date_gmt":"2023-01-27T01:38:41","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/law-oh.com\/?p=1492"},"modified":"2022-12-01T17:44:26","modified_gmt":"2022-12-01T17:44:26","slug":"contesting-a-will-consists-of-several-steps","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/law-oh.com\/contesting-a-will-consists-of-several-steps\/","title":{"rendered":"Contesting a Will Consists of Several Steps"},"content":{"rendered":"

A person’s will outlines who will inherit their property upon their death, and who will handle the estate settlement (called the executor). For many reasons, beneficiaries can feel slighted by what they did or didn\u2019t receive, and some individuals are entirely excluded from inheriting anything at all. The legal process of challenging the validity of a will is called a will contest (or \u201ccontesting the will\u201d).<\/p>\n

Once probate is underway, the named executor will take the necessary steps to complete probate and notify the beneficiaries named in the will. This legal notice typically limits the time when a beneficiary can contest the validity of the will. Generally, a beneficiary (and even a person not named in the will) has thirty to ninety days to bring legal action against the decedent’s will.<\/p>\n

Know that the vast majority of wills pass through probate without issue. The courts rightly view the will like the author’s (testator), last voice. Because the testator can no longer speak to their wishes, the courts try to adhere to the legally filed will stringently. Because of the narrow timeline for filing a will contest and the odds stacked against winning the legal challenge, most challengers will find it a fruitless and costly endeavor.<\/p>\n

Under what circumstances then would you want to contest a will? Legally, only a person or entity with “standing” can contest a will. Standing is when the party involved in the will contest will be personally affected by the case’s outcome. Most often, this means an heir or beneficiary already named in the decedent’s last will or any preceding will. It may also include any person (usually a spouse or child) not named in the will, but because of state intestacy laws would be eligible to inherit in the absence of a will. Typically, four grounds are viable for contesting a will:<\/p>\n