Passing Wealth on Death

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Passing Wealth on Death

Will-Substitutes in Comparative Perspective

Comparative law Property law: general Law: wills, probate, succession, inheritance

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Collection: Studies of the Oxford Institute of European and Comparative Law

Language: English

Published by: Hart Publishing

Published on: 28th July 2016

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 408 pages

ISBN: 9781509907359


Wealth Transfer Methods

Wealth can be transferred on death in a number of different ways, most commonly by will. Yet a person can also use a variety of other means to benefit someone on death. Examples include donationes mortis causa, joint tenancies, trusts, life-insurance contracts and nominations in pension and retirement plans. In the US, these modes of transfer are grouped under the category of ''will-substitutes'' and are generally treated as testamentary dispositions.

Development and Comparative Perspective

Much has been written about the effect of the use of will-substitutes in the US, but little is generally known about developments in other jurisdictions. For the first time, this collection of contributions looks at will-substitutes from a comparative perspective. It examines mechanisms that pass wealth on death across a number of common law, civil law and mixed legal jurisdictions, and explores the rationale behind their use. It analyses them from different viewpoints, including those of owners of businesses, investors, as well as creditors, family members and dependants. The aims of the volume are to show the complexity and dynamics of wealth transfers on death across jurisdictions, to identify patterns between jurisdictions, and to report the attitudes towards the different modes of transfer in light of their utility and the potential frictions they give rise to with policies and principles underpinning current laws.

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