Wills and Estates
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This is not a substitute for legal advice. An attorney
must be consulted. To find an attorney in your area,
please CLICK
HERE.
What
is a codicil?
You acknowledge that LAWCHEK™ owns all rights, title, and interest, including and without limitation all intellectual property rights (as defined below), in and to the forms and information (including LAWCHEK™ website and brand features, including implied licenses, and excluding items licensed by LAWCHEK™ from third parties and excluding any third party property), and that you will not acquire any rights, title, or interest in or to the legal forms or information or copyrights, except as expressly set forth on the site in regard to using the legal forms for information gathering purposes. You will not modify, adapt, translate, prepare derivative works from, decompile, reverse engineer, disassemble or otherwise attempt to derive source copyright from any LAWCHEK™ services or documentation, or create or attempt to create a substitute or similar service or product through use of or access to this website or proprietary information related thereto. You will not remove, obscure, or alter the LAWCHEK™ copyright notice, brand features, or other proprietary rights notices affixed to or contained within any LAWCHEK™ services, software, or documentation (including without limitation the use of LAWCHEK™ brand features with online legal forms, web hosting services, website html codes, or LAWCHEK™ website copyrights, as applicable). "Intellectual Property Rights" means any and all rights existing from time-to-time under patent law, copyright law, semiconductor chip protection law, moral rights law, trade secret law, trademark law, unfair competition law, publicity rights law, privacy rights law, and any and all other proprietary rights, as well as, any and all applications, renewals, extensions, restorations, and re-instatements thereof, now or hereafter in force and effect worldwide.
This is not a substitute for legal advice. An attorney must be consulted. To find an attorney in your area, please CLICK HERE.
What is a codicil?
When a person wishes to make only minor changes to an existing Will, a person may amend a Will with a Codicil. A Codicil changes only specific provisions; it leaves the original Will intact except for the specific changes and may be less expensive than drafting a new Will. A Codicil must be executed with the same formalities as a Will. There can be disadvantages to using a Codicil. Both the original Will and the Codicil must be admitted to probate, therefore, the nature of the change becomes a public record and a beneficiary omitted by the Codicil may try to find reason to object. For this reason, it may be advisable to execute a new Will. For a more complicated Will with many articles and provisions, it can be confusing to try to incorporate the Codicil changes into the original Will since one article may affect another article.
This is not a substitute for legal
advice. An
attorney must be consulted.
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