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  2. Slayer rule - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slayer_rule

    In jurisdictions with a common law slayer rule, a slayer statute may serve to extend and supplement the common law rule, rather than limiting it. For example, where the statute requires the heir to have been convicted to bar inheritance, a common law slayer rule that does not have this requirement may still serve to bar inheritance. [9]

  3. Forced heirship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forced_heirship

    An indefeasible portion, the forced estate, [a] passing to the deceased's next-of-kin [b] (conjunctissimi). A discretionary portion, or free estate, [c] to be freely disposed of by will. Forced heirship is generally a feature of civil-law legal systems which do not recognize total freedom of testation, in contrast with common law jurisdictions.

  4. Illinois Inheritance Laws: What You Should Know - AOL

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  5. Order of succession - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_succession

    These concepts are in use in English inheritance law. The rules may stipulate that eligible heirs are heirs male or heirs general – see further primogeniture (agnatic, cognatic, and also equal). Certain types of property pass to a descendant or relative of the original holder, recipient or grantee according to a fixed order of kinship.

  6. Uniform Simultaneous Death Act - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniform_Simultaneous_Death_Act

    The Uniform Simultaneous Death Act is a uniform act enacted in some U.S. states to alleviate the problem of simultaneous death in determining inheritance.. The Act specifies that, if two or more people die within 120 hours of one another, and no will or other document provides for this situation explicitly, each is considered to have predeceased the others.

  7. What Happens to an Inheritance a Beneficiary Died? - AOL

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  8. Intestacy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intestacy

    Intestacy has a limited application in those jurisdictions that follow civil law or Roman law because the concept of a will is itself less important; the doctrine of forced heirship automatically gives a deceased person's next-of-kin title to a large part (forced estate) of the estate's property by operation of law, beyond the power of the deceased person to defeat or exceed by testamentary gift.

  9. Immediate family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immediate_family

    The definition was to be expanded from "a remaining spouse, sexual cohabitant, partner, step-parent or step-child, parent-in-law or child-in-law, or an individual related by blood whose close association is an equivalent of a family relationship who was accepted by the deceased as a child of his/her family" to include "any person who had ...