Sunnygirl69
Registered User
- Messages
- 165
Thank u @Leper knew u would know1. If you have asset(s) in Spain you need to make a will there.
2. If you have asset(s) in Ireland you need to make a will here.
3. One will will not cover the other, you need two wills.
That's interesting piece early riserI don't know if you have an Irish Times subscription but Dominic Coyle had an interesting (and relevant) reply to a question about a making a will in relation to assets in France and Ireland: https://www.irishtimes.com/business...r-two-dealing-with-foreign-property-1.4860599
Here is an extract:
"In practical terms, the main reason for having separate wills in each country where you have assets is to streamline the probate process. If there is only the one will, it will have to go to probate successively in each country where there are assets and this can be a time consuming process. Worse, distribution of the assets can be held up while the process is ongoing.
One international legal firm recounts the possibly apocryphal tale of a client who had one will covering assets in seven different countries. The process of getting probate took 23 years, during which time most of the intended beneficiaries passed away themselves. Not that it would have made much difference, they said, as by the time lawyers in the seven different countries were paid for sorting out the man’s affairs, there was precious little left for them to inherit anyway.
With separate – but not contradictory – wills, the legal process can run concurrently in whatever number of countries you hold assets.
A second issue is that legal constructs that are valid in one country might not be accepted in another. One example, in the French case, relates to their understanding and treatment of trusts......
........
This is the bread and butter of many legal practices: wills are legal documents and they have a language all their own which is designed to ensure there is no confusion. Money spent on legal advice and guidance in writing a will is money well spent – all the more so for people with anything other than the simplest of personal finances, such as yourselves with this foreign property.
A key risk with multiple wills is that one inadvertently revokes the intention of the other. In general, a subsequent will overrides any previous will. So if you have an overarching will to cover, say, your worldwide assets and then subsequently draw up a French will that clashes with certain provisions of th Irish will, it is the later French will that determines what happens to the assets it covers.
If for no other reason, this alone explains the worth of letting solicitors / notaires handle these matters. And make sure they have sight of both wills to check that they do not work counter to one another, or revoke intended provision for inheritance."
One Will CAN deal with your entire estate worldwide if it is worded correctly. Ie should not contain any clauses limiting it or the revocation clause to a particular jurisdiction.If a Irish married couple is making a will in another EU country, in this case Spain to cover an asset there..... Must they also make a will here in Ireland to deal with what's in Ireland?
I thought 1 will would cover all but I now believe that a will must be made in Spain for Spanish asset. Also this is a first will. Don't know if that makes any difference? Thank u
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?