papervalue
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Just out of interest i am wondering how common the following situation would be: A few years ago my father was widowed and decided to make a will leaving house to one member of family and dividing the rest equally between 4 other kids. All straight forward so far. The day he was making the will he met the Solictor on a Sunday Morning, I travelled to Solictor office with him and stayed outside. He met the Solictor and signed the will. As it was a Sunday Morning their was no one else present in the room to withness the will. My understanding is their has to be one to two withnesses of the Will. When he came out he said what had happened and who was getting what. I said in passing the will would be null and void due to no one present( They was two people paasing through the building but had nothing to do with meeting). The will is as signed that day.
When he does pass when ever- Would you challange the will as been null and void and let everything split 5 ways? Just Interested on legal view and is hard to prove.
When he does pass when ever- Would you challange the will as been null and void and let everything split 5 ways? Just Interested on legal view and is hard to prove.
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