In fairness, its not just the courts. My mother once told me that no matter how old I got, to her I would always be her little boy...
My mother said the same thing too, BUT she didn't judge litigations. :lol:
In fairness, its not just the courts. My mother once told me that no matter how old I got, to her I would always be her little boy...
My mother said that too, but she lied. She got Alzheimers and then died. Now I'm an orphan. Boohoo!
My mother said that too, but she lied. She got Alzheimers and then died. Now I'm an orphan. Boohoo!
I see the son was the last "caretaker". It's amazing how often the "last to care for" becomes the sole inheritor. The elderly are easy pickins.
Not only sole inheritor, but sole executor as well.
I see the son was the last "caretaker". It's amazing how often the "last to care for" becomes the sole inheritor. The elderly are easy pickins.
Like it or not, we now live in a society that is completely different from when these laws
were written. Not only has the law changed but more and more, we find the moral and
mental fabric of society has changed. It was once considered a persons last will was the
departing statement, the last act of life as it were. Today we live in a society that now
believes in democracy when it is convenient, all too often people have principles that change
like the flavour of the month.
I agree the person writing the will sounds like an idiot, but the truth is a will and testament is not
to be considered a reward for service given, it is a gesture of a last act of love for one's family.
In this case the family sounds very dysfunctional to say the least. I cannot imagine a parent who
would behave like this toward his children. It is this toxic lifestyle that permits one to die early
as holding in these negative feelings has got to poison your system.
Should the judge be able to simply overturn a will under these circumstances? The answer is
yes because we are no longer living in a world that once existed a few decades ago, right or
wrong we are all victims of the world of law that together we have created either by being part
of the demand for change, or the silence of principle, that allows change to happen without a
measure of debate.
If one wants to avoid this whole will constesting, courts, lawyers, and greddy b*stard relatives, just do this simple thing. SPEND IT ALL! Cash in all your investments, RRSPs etc., and go on all the vacations you want. Have properties? SELL THEM OFF! Use the cash from those and get a decent apartment and stay there till you kick the bucket. No courts, lawyers, will contesting, and whatnot. There you go, you just beat the system.
That is of course if you want to do it this way.
So the definition you want to go with is the 4th listed- pretty shaky for a legal document I'd say.:lol:
No, not really...word to the wise JLM, there's a reason that smart people retain the services of legal professionals. Lawyers know for instance that legal definitions aren't related to which entry a definition of a word falls under in a general use dictionary....
If for lawyers then using the most obscure definition of a term would make perfect sense.....
It doesn't do that though. Only an "abject idiot" would not be able to understand what the document means when it talks about children and minor children (as an example)
You have to remember we are dealing with the decision one judge here and while his decision may be binding, it doesn't mean it was just or even sensible.
We've been discussing the Wills Variation Act. The point isn't that the deceased must provide. For instance if the deceased owned nothing....The point is that this law states that inheritance must be equitable.I defy you to find me a law anywhere (even something contrived by that Trudeau idiot) that states a man has to provide for his progeny after his demise.
So then what about adopted children, they are not progeny.I submit that if the Act meant "progeny" it would have stated "progeny". :smile:
So when you hear the word "children" you immediately think of people in their 50s? I say bullsh*t. :lol:
So when you hear the word "children" you immediately think of people in their 50s? I say bullsh*t. :lol:
the most obscure definition of a term would make perfect sense.