Legal Question in Wills and Trusts in Virginia
Legal Wills
How legal and binding is a will at the time of death.
If the person is still living is a will legal and binding?
2 Answers from Attorneys
Re: Legal Wills
A will is legal and binding at the time of the testator's death if it was properly executed in accordance with the laws of the state/jurisdiction where it was intended to take effect.
A will has no legal effect or significance while the testator remains alive and does not assume such until the testator's death.
Re: Legal Wills
This question is a little too vague to answer.
A will has absolutely no effect while a person
is still living and it can be changed at any time
up until death.
However, in order for a will to be binding (or a
change to be binding) the will (or new will) must
be executed properly. This is very tricky and
should be done with a lawyer. The biggest
problems with wills are with the method by
which they are executed. There must be
witnesses, a notary, the witnesses should not
be heirs if possible, they must fill out the
witness forms properly, etc.
However, once a person dies, that's it. The
will governs absolutely, 100%, what must happen
to the person's property. Taking property from
the estate of the decedent outside of the will
is THEFT -- a crime just as real as robbing a
7/11. So the will must be followed once the
person has died (assumingit was properly
executed).