Family Law Manchester News
Latest news relating to family law & divorce in Manchster
The Law Commission has made recommendations to bring inheritance law into line with the needs and expectations of modern families, and simplify the law to help the bereaved deal with the property of a deceased family member.
Every year tens of thousands of people die without a will. The property they leave behind is distributed according to legal rules that date back to 1925. More recent legislation allows certain family members and dependants who were not adequately provided for to go to court to claim “family provision”, whether or not there is a will.
The recommendations in the Commission’s report would update the law that determines the entitlements of spouses and others, and remove unnecessary obstacles to valid claims for family provision. The recommendations include reforms that would mean:
- When the deceased had no children, their spouse would inherit the whole estate. Currently, parents or siblings may also be entitled to a share.
- Children who suffer the death of a parent would no longer be at risk of losing their inheritance in the event that they are adopted.
The report also addresses the situation where one member of an unmarried couple dies. At present the survivor can inherit, but only by going to court. The Commission has concluded that some cohabitants should inherit if their partner dies without a will – but only if the couple had lived together for at least five years (or two years, if they had children together).
