Special Needs Trusts
Estate Planning
Medicaid
Probate
About
Contact Us
Resources
 
Overview | Administration of a Decedent's Estate
Guardianship | Conservatorship
 
 
 

Administration of a Decedent’s Estate

After someone dies, the probate court supervises the distribution of his or her property. If the decedent left a will, the probate court appoints the executor named in the will to distribute the property of the estate according to its terms. If the decedent died without a will (which is known as dying “intestate”), the probate court appoints an administrator to distribute the property of the estate according to the state’s law of intestacy. The administrator still follows the steps listed below, but substitutes other procedures for those steps related specifically to wills. The executor of a will and the administrator of an intestate estate are called “fiduciaries” because they stand in a position of trust. In both a testate and intestate estate, the probate court supervises the distribution of property, the payment of the decedent’s outstanding debts, funeral expenses and taxes.

The Probate Process

Special Circumstances: Dying Intestate and Small Estates <$20k

privacy policy | legal disclaimer

copyright © Kearns & Kearns 2005