Pretermitted heir

Pretermitted heir

A pretermitted heir is a term used in the law of property to describe a person who would likely stand to inherit under a will, except that the "testator" (the person who wrote the will) did not know or did not know of the party at the time the will was written. The most common category of pretermitted heir is the pretermitted child, born after the execution of the will.

Rights of a pretermitted child

Many jurisdictions have enacted statutes that permit a pretermitted child to demand an inheritance under the will. Some allow the child to claim their intestate share, while others limit the inheritance to an amount that is comparable to devises made in the will for the children who were alive when the will was written. This may be accomplished by proportionally reducing the gift under the will to the other children, or by reducing gifts under the will to non-family members. An exception common to many jurisdictions prohibits a pretermitted child from claiming an inheritance if the will devised substantially all of the testator's estate to the surviving spouse, and the surviving spouse is the other parent of the pretermitted child.

Some jurisidictions provide the same rights for a child who was pretermitted because, although born "before" the will was executed, he was not "known" of at the time the will was made. This may be because the child was incorrectly believed to be dead, or was later adopted by the testator.

A will may contain a clause, however, which explicitly disinherits any heirs unknown at the time that the will is executed, or any heirs not named in the will. A pretermitted heir may also be denied the right to take under the will if they received an "advancement" against their inheritance - an "inter vivos" gift from the testator of an amount equivalent to what the pretermitted child might take under the will.

Pretermitted spouse

Another party for whom the state might provide is the pretermitted spouse, whom the testator does not marry until after the execution of the will. Many jurisdictions provide that a pretermitted spouse will receive either her intestate share (what she would have received had the testator died with no will), or the elective share (a set amount or formula provided by law for spouses who are disinherited in the will).

Like a pretermitted child, a pretermitted spouse may be explicitly disinherited in the will, or may be excluded from taking under the will if they received an advancement on their inheritance in anticipation of the marriage. A pretermitted spouse may also disclaim any interest in the testator's estate through an antenuptial or prenuptial agreement.


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • pretermitted heir — A child who is not mentioned in a will and whom the court believes was accidentally overlooked by the person who made the will. For example, a child born or adopted after the will is made may be deemed a pretermitted heir. If the court determines …   Law dictionary

  • pretermitted heir — noun A person who would likely stand to inherit under a will, except that the testator did not know of the party or of the relationship at the time the will was written. See Also: pretermitted child, pretermitted spouse …   Wiktionary

  • pretermitted heir — One who as a child or descendant of another would have shared in the estate of the latter if the latter had died intestate but who is not named in or provided for by the will left by such ancestor. As to statutes respecting right of pretermitted… …   Ballentine's law dictionary

  • pretermitted heir — /priytarmitad er/ A child or other descendant omitted by a testator. Where a testator unintentionally fails to mention in his will, or make provision for, a child, either living at the date of the execution of the will or born thereafter, a… …   Black's law dictionary

  • heir — / ar/ n: one who inherits or is entitled to succeed to the possession of property after the death of its owner: as a: one who by operation of law inherits the property and esp. the real property of a person who dies without leaving a valid will… …   Law dictionary

  • heir — /er/ See heirs @ heir apparent An heir whose right of inheritance is indefeasible, provided he outlive the ancestor; as in England the eldest son, or his issue, who must, by the course of the common law, be heir to the father whenever he happens… …   Black's law dictionary

  • heir — /er/ See heirs @ heir apparent An heir whose right of inheritance is indefeasible, provided he outlive the ancestor; as in England the eldest son, or his issue, who must, by the course of the common law, be heir to the father whenever he happens… …   Black's law dictionary

  • pretermitted child — noun A child who would likely stand to inherit under a will, except that the testator did not know of the child at the time the will was written, usually because the child was not yet born. See Also: pretermitted heir, pretermitted spouse …   Wiktionary

  • pretermitted spouse — noun A spouse who would likely stand to inherit under a will, but was not included in the will because he or she was not yet married to the testator at the time the will was written. See Also: elective share, pretermitted child, pretermitted heir …   Wiktionary

  • pretermitted child — See pretermitted heir …   Ballentine's law dictionary

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