Legal Question in Wills and Trusts in Tennessee

No will - what now?

My mother passed away two years ago in TN, with no will. Not sure why as we weren't terribly close. She has a sizable estate as well. I've just always assumed that ''everything'' just lawfully and normally passed over to my step-father, due to the laws of intestate succesion. It's come to my attention that I'm legally due 1/3 of her estate, per TN Probate Law. My question is this: Since there is no will, and a sizable estate, do I or do I not have to ''wait'' until my step father passes away as well, before collecting or inheriting whatever may be due to me? I just assumed that's how that stuff works. I'm a nurse, not a lawyer and had/have no clue. Thank you in advance for any advice.


Asked on 5/01/03, 7:59 pm

4 Answers from Attorneys

Jonathan J. Braverman Jonathan J. Braverman, Attorney & Mediator

Re: No will - what now?

Suggest you retain a TN lawyer in the county where your mother lived. The court will appoint an Administrator now, who will determine how much you will receive now.

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Answered on 5/01/03, 9:16 pm
Arnold Nager Arnold H. Nager, Esquire

Re: No will - what now?

An administrator must be appointed in TN. You are entitled to your share after the estate is settled.

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Answered on 5/02/03, 7:04 am
Rosella Shackelford Shackelford Legal Service

Re: No will - what now?

Your right to the intestate succession began with your mother's death, not your stepfather's, and depending on the length of her marriage to him, that is subject to a sliding scale of distribution. Therefore, you can assert your rights against her estate but you will need to do so in Court.

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Answered on 5/02/03, 9:56 am
Walter LeVine Walter D. LeVine, Esq.

Re: No will - what now?

What you can inherit by intestacy depends upon how your mother's assets were registered. Joint assets (those in her name with your step-father) pass outside intestacy and belong to the surviving joint owner. Only assets in your mother's name alone qualify as intestate assets that you participate in, to the extent of 1/3. Someone needs to be appointed as administrator of her estate (this would probably be your step-father) and then arrange to administer her estate. He is required to report to you on her assets, expenses and any taxes that might be due. You are entitled to 1/3 of her liquid assets other than real estate (your step-father has a life estate in real estate), which cannot be sold until he dies.

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Answered on 5/02/03, 11:17 am


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