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[Introduced][Status][Bill Documents][Fiscal Note][Bills Directory]
S.B. 75 Enrolled
AN ACT RELATING TO THE UNIFORM PROBATE CODE; ENACTING THE UNIFORM
STATUTORY RULE AGAINST PERPETUITIES; REPEALING AND REENACTING
CHAPTER 2 PROVISIONS AND ENACTING RELATED PROVISIONS; PROVIDING
TRANSITIONAL LANGUAGE; AND PROVIDING AN EFFECTIVE DATE.
This act affects sections of Utah Code Annotated 1953 as follows:
AMENDS:
7-5-1, as last amended by Chapter 161, Laws of Utah 1997
7-5-9, as last amended by Chapter 6, Laws of Utah 1982
26-19-2, as last amended by Chapter 79, Laws of Utah 1996
31A-22-415, as enacted by Chapter 242, Laws of Utah 1985
58-31-13, as last amended by Chapter 297, Laws of Utah 1993
58-67-601, as enacted by Chapter 248, Laws of Utah 1996
62A-3-306, as last amended by Chapter 130, Laws of Utah 1996
75-3-303, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-3-308, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-3-906, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-5-102, as last amended by Chapter 194, Laws of Utah 1977
75-6-106, as last amended by Chapter 194, Laws of Utah 1977
75-7-401, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
78-11-6.5, as enacted by Chapter 113, Laws of Utah 1991
ENACTS:
75-2-208, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-209, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-210, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-211, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-212, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-213, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-214, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-405, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-514, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-515, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-702, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-703, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-704, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-705, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-706, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-707, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-708, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-709, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-710, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-711, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-1201, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-1202, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-1203, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-1204, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-1205, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-1206, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-1207, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-1208, Utah Code Annotated 1953
75-2-1301, Utah Code Annotated 1953
REPEALS AND REENACTS:
75-1-107, as last amended by Chapter 30, Laws of Utah 1992
75-1-201, as last amended by Chapter 261, Laws of Utah 1991
75-2-101, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-102, as last amended by Chapter 110, Laws of Utah 1988
75-2-103, as last amended by Chapter 30, Laws of Utah 1992
75-2-104, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-105, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-106, as last amended by Chapter 194, Laws of Utah 1977
75-2-108, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-109, as last amended by Chapter 30, Laws of Utah 1992
75-2-110, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-111, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-112, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-113, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-114, as enacted by Chapter 226, Laws of Utah 1983
75-2-201, as last amended by Chapter 155, Laws of Utah 1988
75-2-202, as last amended by Chapter 194, Laws of Utah 1977
75-2-203, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-204, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-205, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-206, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-207, as last amended by Chapter 194, Laws of Utah 1977
75-2-301, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-302, as last amended by Chapter 110, Laws of Utah 1988
75-2-401, as last amended by Chapter 110, Laws of Utah 1988
75-2-402, as last amended by Chapter 110, Laws of Utah 1988
75-2-403, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-404, as last amended by Chapter 245, Laws of Utah 1979
75-2-501, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-502, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-503, as last amended by Chapter 194, Laws of Utah 1977
75-2-504, as last amended by Chapter 179, Laws of Utah 1992
75-2-505, as last amended by Chapter 194, Laws of Utah 1977
75-2-506, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-507, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-508, as last amended by Chapter 226, Laws of Utah 1983
75-2-509, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-510, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-511, as last amended by Chapter 194, Laws of Utah 1977
75-2-512, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-513, as last amended by Chapter 194, Laws of Utah 1977
75-2-601, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-602, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-603, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-604, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-605, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-606, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-607, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-608, as enacted by Chapter 194, Laws of Utah 1977
75-2-609, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-610, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-611, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-701, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-801, as enacted by Chapter 194, Laws of Utah 1977
75-2-802, as last amended by Chapter 110, Laws of Utah 1988
75-2-803, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-804, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-901, as last amended by Chapter 218, Laws of Utah 1994
75-2-902, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-1001, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
REPEALS:
75-2-612, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-613, as enacted by Chapter 54, Laws of Utah 1982
75-2-614, as enacted by Chapter 226, Laws of Utah 1983
75-2-1002, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-1003, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-1005, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-1006, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-1007, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
75-2-1008, as enacted by Chapter 150, Laws of Utah 1975
Be it enacted by the Legislature of the state of Utah:
Section 1. Section 7-5-1 is amended to read:
7-5-1. Definitions -- Allowable trust companies -- Exceptions.
(1) As used in this chapter:
(a) "Business trust" means an entity engaged in a trade or business that is created by a
declaration of trust that transfers property to trustees, to be held and managed by them for the benefit
of persons holding certificates representing the beneficial interest in the trust estate and assets.
(b) "Trust business" means, except as provided in Subsection (1)(c), a business in which one
acts in any agency or fiduciary capacity, including that of personal representative, executor,
administrator, conservator, guardian, assignee, receiver, depositary, or trustee under appointment as
trustee for any purpose permitted by law, including the definition of "trust" set forth in Subsection
75-1-201[
(c) "Trust business" does not include the following means of holding funds, assets, or other
property:
(i) funds held in a client trust account by an attorney authorized to practice law in this state;
(ii) funds held in connection with the purchase or sale of real estate by a person authorized
to act as a real estate broker in this state;
(iii) funds or other assets held in escrow by a person authorized by the department in
accordance with Chapter 22 or by the Utah Insurance Department to act as an escrow agent in this
state;
(iv) funds held by a homeowners' association or similar organization to pay maintenance and
other related costs for commonly owned property;
(v) funds held in connection with the collection of debts or payments on loans by a person
acting solely as the agent or representative or otherwise at the sole direction of the person to which
the debt or payment is owed, including funds held by an escrow agent for payment of taxes or
insurance;
(vi) funds and other assets held in trust on an occasional or isolated basis by a person who
does not represent that he is engaged in the trust business in Utah;
(vii) funds or other assets found by a court to be held in an implied, resulting, or constructive
trust;
(viii) funds or other assets held by a court appointed conservator, guardian, receiver, trustee,
or other fiduciary if:
(A) the conservator, receiver, guardian, trustee, or other fiduciary is responsible to the court
in the same manner as a personal representative under Title 75, Chapter 3, Part 5, Supervised
Administration, or as a receiver under Rule 66, Utah Rules of Civil Procedure;
(B) the conservator, trustee, or other fiduciary is a certified public accountant or has
qualified for and received a designation as a certified financial planner, chartered financial
consultant, certified financial analyst, or similar designation suitable to the court, that evidences the
conservator's, trustee's, or other fiduciary's professional competence to manage financial matters;
(C) no trust company is willing or eligible to serve as conservator, guardian, trustee, or
receiver after notice has been given pursuant to Section 75-1-401 to all trust companies doing
business in this state, including a statement of the value of the assets to be managed. That notice
need not be provided, however, if a trust company has been employed by the fiduciary to manage
the assets; and
(D) in the event guardianship services are needed, the person seeking appointment as a
guardian under this subsection is a specialized care professional, as that term is defined in Section
75-5-311, or a business or state agency that employs the services of one of those professionals for
the purpose of caring for the incapacitated person, so long as the specialized care professional,
business, or state agency does not:
(I) profit financially or otherwise from, or receive compensation for acting in that capacity,
except for the direct costs of providing guardianship or conservatorship services; or
(II) otherwise have a conflict of interest in providing those services;
(ix) funds or other assets held by a credit services organization operating in compliance with
Title 13, Chapter 21, Credit Services Organizations Act;
(x) funds, securities, or other assets held in a customer account in connection with the
purchase or sale of securities by a regulated securities broker, dealer, or transfer agent; or
(xi) funds, assets, and other property held in a business trust for the benefit of holders of
certificates of beneficial interest if the fiduciary activities of the business trust are merely incidental
to conducting business in the business trust form.
(d) "Trust company" means an institution authorized to engage in the trust business under
this chapter. Only the following may be a trust company:
(i) a Utah depository institution or its wholly owned subsidiary;
(ii) an out-of-state depository institution authorized to engage in business as a depository
institution in Utah or its wholly owned subsidiary;
(iii) a direct or indirect subsidiary of a depository institution holding company that also has
a direct or indirect subsidiary authorized to engage in business as a depository institution in Utah;
and
(iv) any other corporation continuously and lawfully engaged in the trust business in this
state since before July 1, 1981.
(2) Only a trust company may engage in the trust business in this state.
(3) The requirements of this chapter do not apply to:
(a) an institution authorized to engage in a trust business in another state that is engaged in
trust activities in this state solely to fulfill its duties as a trustee of a trust created and administered
in another state;
(b) a national bank, federal savings bank, federal savings and loan association, or federal
credit union authorized to engage in business as a depository institution in Utah, or any wholly
owned subsidiary of any of these, to the extent the institution is authorized by its primary federal
regulator to engage in the trust business in this state; or
(c) a state agency that is otherwise authorized by statute to act as a conservator, receiver,
guardian, trustee, or in any other fiduciary capacity.
Section 2. Section 7-5-9 is amended to read:
7-5-9. Registration of investment in name of nominee -- Records -- Possession of
investment.
(1) A trust company may cause any security, as defined in Subsection 75-1-201[
held in its agency or fiduciary capacity to be registered and held in the name of a nominee or
nominees of the trust company. The trust company shall be liable for the acts of any such nominee
with respect to any investment so registered. Investments other than securities held in the name of
a nominee on June 30, 1981, may continue to be held in that manner.
(2) The records of the trust company shall at all times show the ownership of any such
investment, which investment shall be in the possession or control of the trust company and be kept
separate and apart from the assets of the trust company.
Section 3. Section 26-19-2 is amended to read:
26-19-2. Definitions.
As used in this chapter:
(1) "Employee welfare benefit plan" means a medical insurance plan developed by an
employer under 29 U.S.C. Section 1001, et seq., the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of
1974 as amended.
(2) "Estate" means, regarding a deceased recipient, all real and personal property or other
assets included within a decedent's estate as defined in Section 75-1-201 and a decedent's augmented
estate as defined in Section [
(3) "Insurer" includes:
(a) a group health plan as defined in Subsection 607(1) of the federal Employee Retirement
Income Security Act of 1974;
(b) a health maintenance organization; and
(c) any entity offering a health service benefit plan.
(4) "Medical assistance" means any funds expended by the state under Title 26, Chapter 18,
Medical Assistance Act, and under Titles XVIII and XIX, federal Social Security Act.
(5) "Provider" means a person or entity who provides services to a recipient.
(6) "Recipient" means:
(a) a person who has applied for or received medical assistance from the state;
(b) the guardian, conservator, or other personal representative of a person under Subsection
(6)(a) if the person is a minor or an incapacitated person; or
(c) the estate and survivors of a person under Subsection (6)(a) if the person is deceased.
(7) "State plan" means the state Medicaid program as enacted in accordance with Title XIX,
federal Social Security Act.
(8) "Third party" includes:
(a) an individual, institution, corporation, public or private agency, trust, estate, insurance
carrier, employee welfare benefit plan, health maintenance organization, health service organization,
preferred provider organization, governmental program such as Medicare, CHAMPUS, and workers'
compensation, which may be liable to pay all or part of the medical costs of injury, disease, or
disability of a recipient, unless any of these are excluded by department rule; and
(b) a spouse or a parent who:
(i) may be liable to pay all or part of the medical costs of a recipient under law or by court
or administrative order; or
(ii) has been ordered to maintain health, dental, or disability insurance to cover medical
expenses of a spouse or dependent child by court or administrative order.
Section 4. Section 31A-22-415 is amended to read:
31A-22-415. Simultaneous death.
Section [
Section 5. Section 58-31-13 is amended to read:
58-31-13. Grounds for denial of licensure and disciplinary proceedings.
(1) Grounds for refusal to issue a license to an applicant, for refusal to renew the license of
a licensee, to revoke, suspend, restrict, or place on probation the license of a licensee, to issue a
public or private reprimand to a licensee, and to issue cease and desist orders shall be in accordance
with Section 58-1-401.
(2) (a) If a court of competent jurisdiction determines that a nurse is an "incapacitated
person" as defined in Subsection 75-1-201[
license of the nurse upon entry of the judgment, regardless of the pendency of an appeal.
(b) If it appears to the board that there is reasonable cause to believe that a nurse, even
though he has not been judicially determined to be incompetent, mentally incompetent, or incapable,
is unable to practice nursing with reasonable skill and safety to patients because of illness,
drunkenness, excessive use of drugs, narcotics, chemicals, or any other type of material, or as a result
of any mental or physical condition, a complaint in the name of the board shall be served upon the
nurse for hearing on the sole issue of the capacity of the nurse to conduct properly the practice of
nursing.
(c) For purposes of this subsection, every nurse licensed under this chapter who accepts the
privilege of practicing nursing in this state is considered to have:
(i) given consent to submit to a mental or physical examination when directed in writing by
the board to do so; and
(ii) waived all objections to the admissibility of the examining physicians' testimony or
examination reports on the ground that they constitute a privileged communication.
(d) (i) Failure of a nurse to submit to the examination when directed by the board constitutes
grounds for immediate suspension of the nurse's license, unless the failure was due to circumstances
beyond the control of the nurse.
(ii) The director may enter an order of suspension of the license without the taking of
testimony or the presentation of evidence upon a finding of reasonable cause to believe that an order
of suspension is necessary to protect the public health, safety, or welfare.
(e) A nurse whose license is suspended under this subsection shall, at reasonable intervals,
be afforded the opportunity to demonstrate that he can resume the competent practice of nursing with
reasonable skill and safety to patients.
Section 6. Section 58-67-601 is amended to read:
58-67-601. Mentally incompetent or incapacitated physician.
(1) As used in this section:
(a) "Incapacitated person" has the same definition as in Section [
(b) "Mentally ill" has the same definition as in Section 62A-12-202.
(2) If a court of competent jurisdiction determines a physician is an incapacitated person or
that he is mentally ill and unable to safely engage in the practice of medicine, the director shall
immediately suspend the license of the physician upon the entry of the judgment of the court,
without further proceedings under Title 63, Chapter 46b, Administrative Procedures Act, regardless
of whether an appeal from the court's ruling is pending. The director shall promptly notify the
physician, in writing, of the suspension.
(3) (a) If the division and a majority of the board find reasonable cause to believe a
physician, who is not determined judicially to be an incapacitated person or to be mentally ill, is
incapable of practicing medicine with reasonable skill regarding the safety of patients, because of
illness, excessive use of drugs or alcohol, or as a result of any mental or physical condition, the board
shall recommend that the director file a petition with the division, and cause the petition to be served
upon the physician with a notice of hearing on the sole issue of the capacity of the physician to
competently and safely engage in the practice of medicine.
(b) The hearing shall be conducted under Section 58-1-109, and Title 63, Chapter 46b,
Administrative Procedures Act, except as provided in Subsection (4).
(4) (a) Every physician who accepts the privilege of being licensed under this chapter gives
consent to:
(i) submitting at his own expense to an immediate mental or physical examination when
directed in writing by the division and a majority of the board to do so; and
(ii) the admissibility of the reports of the examining physician's testimony or examination,
and waives all objections on the ground the reports constitute a privileged communication.
(b) The examination may be ordered by the division, with the consent of a majority of the
board, only upon a finding of reasonable cause to believe:
(i) the physician is mentally ill or incapacitated or otherwise unable to practice medicine
with reasonable skill and safety; and
(ii) immediate action by the division and the board is necessary to prevent harm to the
physician's patients or the general public.
(c) (i) Failure of a physician to submit to the examination ordered under this section is a
ground for the division's immediate suspension of the physician's license by written order of the
director.
(ii) The division may enter the order of suspension without further compliance with Title
63, Chapter 46b, Administrative Procedures Act, unless the division finds the failure to submit to
the examination ordered under this section was due to circumstances beyond the control of the
physician and was not related directly to the illness or incapacity of the physician.
(5) (a) A physician whose license is suspended under Subsection (2) or (3) has the right to
a hearing to appeal the suspension within ten days after the license is suspended.
(b) The hearing held under this subsection shall be conducted in accordance with Sections
58-1-108 and 58-1-109 for the sole purpose of determining if sufficient basis exists for the
continuance of the order of suspension in order to prevent harm to the physician's patients or the
general public.
(6) A physician whose license is revoked, suspended, or in any way restricted under this
section may request the division and the board to consider, at reasonable intervals, evidence
presented by the physician, under procedures established by division rule, regarding any change in
the physician's condition, to determine whether:
(a) he is or is not able to safely and competently engage in the practice of medicine; and
(b) he is qualified to have his license to practice under this chapter restored completely or
in part.
Section 7. Section 62A-3-306 is amended to read:
62A-3-306. Emergency order authorizing protective services -- Implementation.
(1) Upon petition by the division or another interested party, a district court may issue an
order authorizing the provision of protective services on an emergency basis if it finds that:
(a) the person to be protected is a disabled or elder adult;
(b) an emergency situation exists; and
(c) the person to be protected does not have a guardian authorized by law to act on his
behalf, or his guardian has failed or refused to act.
(2) In issuing an emergency order, the court shall order only those protective services which
are necessary to remove the conditions creating the emergency, and shall specifically designate in
the order the protective services which are approved, together with supporting facts.
(3) Protective services authorized by an emergency order may not include hospitalization,
nursing or custodial care, or a change of residence unless the court specifically finds that the action
is necessary and approves that action in its order.
(4) Protective services shall be provided through an emergency order for a period not to
exceed three business days, at which time the order shall terminate unless a petition for guardianship,
conservatorship, or other protective service has been initiated. If such a petition is made, the
emergency order may be continued for as long as 15 days from the date the petition was filed, to
allow time for a hearing to determine whether the emergency order shall remain in effect.
(5) In its emergency order, the court shall appoint the petitioner or another interested person
as guardian, as defined in Subsection 75-1-201 [
disabled person's welfare, and has authority to consent to the approved protective services until the
expiration of the order.
(6) The issuance of an emergency order and the appointment of a guardian until the
expiration of the order does not deprive the protected person of any right, except to the extent
provided in the order or appointment.
(7) To implement an emergency order the court may authorize forcible entry by a law
enforcement officer to the premises where the protected person is residing, for the purpose of
rendering protective services or transporting the person to another location for the provision of those
services. Forcible entry under this subsection is authorized only after a showing to the court that
voluntary access to the premises is not possible and that forcible entry is required.
Section 8. Section 75-1-107 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-1-107. Evidence of death or status.
In addition to the rules of evidence in courts of general jurisdiction, the following rules
relating to a determination of death and status apply:
(1) Death occurs when an individual is determined to be dead as provided in Title 26,
Chapter 34, Uniform Determination of Death Act.
(2) A certified or authenticated copy of a death certificate purporting to be issued by an
official or agency of the place where the death purportedly occurred is prima facie evidence of the
fact, place, date, and time of death and the identity of the decedent.
(3) A certified or authenticated copy of any record or report of a governmental agency,
domestic or foreign, that an individual is missing, detained, dead, or alive is prima facie evidence
of the status and of the dates, circumstances, and places disclosed by the record or report.
(4) In the absence of prima facie evidence of death under Subsection (2) or (3), the fact of
death may be established by clear and convincing evidence, including circumstantial evidence.
(5) An individual whose death is not established under Subsection (1), (2), (3), or (4) who
is absent for a continuous period of five years, during which the individual has not been heard from,
and whose absence is not satisfactorily explained after diligent search or inquiry, is presumed to be
dead. The individual's death is presumed to have occurred at the end of the period unless there is
sufficient evidence for determining that death occurred earlier.
(6) In the absence of evidence disputing the time of death stated on a document described
in Subsection (2) or (3), a document described in Subsection (2) or (3) that states a time of death 120
hours or more after the time of death of another individual, however the time of death of the other
individual is determined, establishes by clear and convincing evidence that the individual survived
the other individual by 120 hours.
Section 9. Section 75-1-201 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-1-201. General definitions.
Subject to additional definitions contained in the subsequent chapters that are applicable to
specific chapters, parts, or sections, and unless the context otherwise requires, in this code:
(1) "Agent" includes an attorney-in-fact under a durable or nondurable power of attorney,
an individual authorized to make decisions concerning another's health care, and an individual
authorized to make decisions for another under a natural death act.
(2) "Application" means a written request to the registrar for an order of informal probate
or appointment under Title 75, Chapter 3, Part 3.
(3) "Beneficiary," as it relates to trust beneficiaries, includes a person who has any present
or future interest, vested or contingent, and also includes the owner of an interest by assignment or
other transfer; as it relates to a charitable trust, includes any person entitled to enforce the trust; as
it relates to a "beneficiary of a beneficiary designation," refers to a beneficiary of an insurance or
annuity policy, of an account with POD designation, of a security registered in beneficiary form
(TOD), or of a pension, profit-sharing, retirement, or similar benefit plan, or other nonprobate
transfer at death; and, as it relates to a "beneficiary designated in a governing instrument," includes
a grantee of a deed, a devisee, a trust beneficiary, a beneficiary of a beneficiary designation, a donee,
appointee, or taker in default of a power of appointment, and a person in whose favor a power of
attorney or a power held in any individual, fiduciary, or representative capacity is exercised.
(4) "Beneficiary designation" refers to a governing instrument naming a beneficiary of an
insurance or annuity policy, of an account with POD designation, of a security registered in
beneficiary form (TOD), or of a pension, profit-sharing, retirement, or similar benefit plan, or other
nonprobate transfer at death.
(5) "Child" includes any individual entitled to take as a child under this code by intestate
succession from the parent whose relationship is involved and excludes any person who is only a
stepchild, a foster child, a grandchild, or any more remote descendant.
(6) "Claims," in respect to estates of decedents and protected persons, includes liabilities of
the decedent or protected person, whether arising in contract, in tort, or otherwise, and liabilities of
the estate which arise at or after the death of the decedent or after the appointment of a conservator,
including funeral expenses and expenses of administration. "Claims" does not include estate or
inheritance taxes, or demands or disputes regarding title of a decedent or protected person to specific
assets alleged to be included in the estate.
(7) "Conservator" means a person who is appointed by a court to manage the estate of a
protected person.
(8) "Court" means any of the courts of record in this state having jurisdiction in matters
relating to the affairs of decedents.
(9) "Descendant" of an individual means all of his descendants of all generations, with the
relationship of parent and child at each generation being determined by the definition of child and
parent contained in this title.
(10) "Devise," when used as a noun, means a testamentary disposition of real or personal
property and, when used as a verb, means to dispose of real or personal property by will.
(11) "Devisee" means any person designated in a will to receive a devise. For the purposes
of Title 75, Chapter 3, in the case of a devise to an existing trust or trustee, or to a trustee in trust
described by will, the trust or trustee is the devisee, and the beneficiaries are not devisees.
(12) "Disability" means cause for a protective order as described by Section 75-5-401.
(13) "Distributee" means any person who has received property of a decedent from his
personal representative other than as a creditor or purchaser. A testamentary trustee is a distributee
only to the extent of distributed assets or increment thereto remaining in his hands. A beneficiary
of a testamentary trust to whom the trustee has distributed property received from a personal
representative is a distributee of the personal representative. For purposes of this provision,
"testamentary trustee" includes a trustee to whom assets are transferred by will, to the extent of the
devised assets.
(14) "Estate" includes the property of the decedent, trust, or other person whose affairs are
subject to this title as originally constituted and as it exists from time to time during administration.
(15) "Exempt property" means that property of a decedent's estate which is described in
Section 75-2-403.
(16) "Fiduciary" includes a personal representative, guardian, conservator, and trustee.
(17) "Foreign personal representative" means a personal representative of another
jurisdiction.
(18) "Formal proceedings" means proceedings conducted before a judge with notice to
interested persons.
(19) "Governing instrument" means a deed, will, trust, insurance or annuity policy, account
with POD designation, security registered in beneficiary form (TOD), pension, profit-sharing,
retirement, or similar benefit plan, instrument creating or exercising a power of appointment or a
power of attorney, or a dispositive, appointive, or nominative instrument of any similar type.
(20) "Guardian" means a person who has qualified as a guardian of a minor or incapacitated
person pursuant to testamentary or court appointment, but excludes one who is merely a guardian
ad litem.
(21) "Heirs," except as controlled by Section 75-2-711, means persons, including the
surviving spouse and state, who are entitled under the statutes of intestate succession to the property
of a decedent.
(22) "Incapacitated person" means an individual described in Section 75-5-303.
(23) "Informal proceedings" mean those conducted without notice to interested persons by
an officer of the court acting as a registrar for probate of a will or appointment of a personal
representative.
(24) "Interested person" includes heirs, devisees, children, spouses, creditors, beneficiaries,
and any others having a property right in or claim against a trust estate or the estate of a decedent,
ward, or protected person. It also includes persons having priority for appointment as personal
representative and other fiduciaries representing interested persons. The meaning as it relates to
particular persons may vary from time to time and shall be determined according to the particular
purposes of, and matter involved in, any proceeding.
(25) "Issue" of a person means descendant as defined in Subsection (9).
(26) "Joint tenants with the right of survivorship" and "community property with the right
of survivorship" includes co-owners of property held under circumstances that entitle one or more
to the whole of the property on the death of the other or others, but excludes forms of co-ownership
registration in which the underlying ownership of each party is in proportion to that party's
contribution.
(27) "Lease" includes an oil, gas, or other mineral lease.
(28) "Letters" includes letters testamentary, letters of guardianship, letters of administration,
and letters of conservatorship.
(29) "Minor" means a person who is under 21 years of age.
(30) "Mortgage" means any conveyance, agreement, or arrangement in which property is
used as security.
(31) "Nonresident decedent" means a decedent who was domiciled in another jurisdiction
at the time of his death.
(32) "Organization" includes a corporation, limited liability company, business trust, estate,
trust, partnership, joint venture, association, government or governmental subdivision or agency, or
any other legal or commercial entity.
(33) "Parent" includes any person entitled to take, or who would be entitled to take if the
child died without a will, as a parent under this code by intestate succession from the child whose
relationship is in question and excludes any person who is only a stepparent, foster parent, or
grandparent.
(34) "Payor" means a trustee, insurer, business entity, employer, government, governmental
agency or subdivision, or any other person authorized or obligated by law or a governing instrument
to make payments.
(35) "Person" means an individual or an organization.
(36) (a) "Personal representative" includes executor, administrator, successor personal
representative, special administrator, and persons who perform substantially the same function under
the law governing their status.
(b) "General personal representative" excludes special administrator.
(37) "Petition" means a written request to the court for an order after notice.
(38) "Proceeding" includes action at law and suit in equity.
(39) "Property" includes both real and personal property or any interest therein and means
anything that may be the subject of ownership.
(40) "Protected person" is as defined in Section 75-5-401.
(41) "Protective proceeding" means a proceeding described in Section 75-5-401.
(42) "Registrar" refers to the official of the court designated to perform the functions of
registrar as provided in Section 75-1-307.
(43) "Security" includes any note, stock, treasury stock, bond, debenture, evidence of
indebtedness, certificate of interest, or participation in an oil, gas, or mining title or lease or in
payments out of production under such a title or lease, collateral trust certificate, transferable share,
voting trust certificate, and, in general, any interest or instrument commonly known as a security,
or any certificate of interest or participation, any temporary or interim certificate, receipt, or
certificate of deposit for, or any warrant or right to subscribe to or purchase, any of the foregoing.
(44) "Settlement," in reference to a decedent's estate, includes the full process of
administration, distribution, and closing.
(45) "Special administrator" means a personal representative as described in Sections
75-3-614 through 75-3-618.
(46) "State" means a state of the United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth
of Puerto Rico, or any territory or insular possession subject to the jurisdiction of the United States.
(47) "Successor personal representative" means a personal representative, other than a
special administrator, who is appointed to succeed a previously appointed personal representative.
(48) "Successors" means persons, other than creditors, who are entitled to property of a
decedent under the decedent's will or this title.
(49) "Supervised administration" refers to the proceedings described in Title 75, Chapter 3,
Part 5.
(50) "Survive," except for purposes of Part 3 of Article VI, Uniform TOD Security
Registration Act, means that an individual has neither predeceased an event, including the death of
another individual, nor is considered to have predeceased an event under Section 75-2-104 or
75-2-702. The term includes its derivatives, such as "survives," "survived," "survivor," and
"surviving."
(51) "Testacy proceeding" means a proceeding to establish a will or determine intestacy.
(52) "Testator" includes an individual of either sex.
(53) "Trust" includes any express trust, private or charitable, with additions thereto,
wherever and however created. The term also includes a trust created or determined by judgment
or decree under which the trust is to be administered in the manner of an express trust. The term
excludes other constructive trusts, and it excludes resulting trusts, conservatorships, personal
representatives, trust accounts as defined in Title 75, Chapter 6, custodial arrangements pursuant to
any Uniform Transfers To Minors Act, business trusts providing for certificates to be issued to
beneficiaries, common trust funds, voting trusts, preneed funeral plans under Title 58, Chapter 58,
Preneed Funeral Arrangement Act, security arrangements, liquidation trusts, and trusts for the
primary purpose of paying debts, dividends, interest, salaries, wages, profits, pensions, or employee
benefits of any kind, and any arrangement under which a person is nominee or escrowee for another.
(54) "Trustee" includes an original, additional, or successor trustee, whether or not appointed
or confirmed by the court.
(55) "Ward" means an individual described in Section 75-5-303.
(56) "Will" includes codicil and any testamentary instrument which merely appoints an
executor, revokes or revises another will, nominates a guardian, or expressly excludes or limits the
right of an individual or class to succeed to property of the decedent passing by intestate succession.
Section 10. Section 75-2-101 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-101. Intestate succession.
(1) Any part of a decedent's estate not effectively disposed of by will passes by intestate
succession to the decedent's heirs as provided in this title, except as modified by the decedent's will.
(2) A decedent by will may expressly exclude or limit the right of an individual or class to
succeed to property of the decedent passing by intestate succession. If that individual or a member
of that class survives the decedent, the share of the decedent's intestate estate to which that individual
or class would have succeeded passes as if that individual or each member of that class had
disclaimed his intestate share.
Section 11. Section 75-2-102 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-102. Intestate share of spouse.
(1) The intestate share of a decedent's surviving spouse is:
(a) the entire intestate estate if:
(i) no descendant of the decedent survives the decedent; or
(ii) all of the decedent's surviving descendants are also descendants of the surviving spouse;
(b) the first $50,000, plus 1/2 of any balance of the intestate estate, if one or more of the
decedent's surviving descendants are not descendants of the surviving spouse.
(2) For purposes of Subsection (1)(b), if the intestate estate passes to both the decedent's
surviving spouse and to other heirs, then any nonprobate transfer, as defined in Section 75-2-206,
received by the surviving spouse is chargeable against the intestate share of the surviving spouse.
Section 12. Section 75-2-103 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-103. Share of heirs other than surviving spouse.
(1) Any part of the intestate estate not passing to the decedent's surviving spouse under
Section 75-2-102, or the entire intestate estate if there is no surviving spouse, passes in the following
order to the individuals designated below who survive the decedent:
(a) to the decedent's descendants per capita at each generation as defined in Subsection
75-2-106(2);
(b) if there is no surviving descendant, to the decedent's parents equally if both survive, or
to the surviving parent;
(c) if there is no surviving descendant or parent, to the descendants of the decedent's parents
or either of them per capita at each generation as defined in Subsection 75-2-106(3);
(d) if there is no surviving descendant, parent, or descendant of a parent, but the decedent
is survived by one or more grandparents or descendants of grandparents, half of the estate passes to
the decedent's paternal grandparents equally if both survive, or to the surviving paternal grandparent,
or to the descendants of the decedent's paternal grandparents or either of them if both are deceased,
the descendants taking per capita at each generation as defined in Subsection 75-2-106(3); and the
other half passes to the decedent's maternal relatives in the same manner; but if there is no surviving
grandparent or descendant of a grandparent on either the paternal or the maternal side, the entire
estate passes to the decedent's relatives on the other side in the same manner as the half.
(2) For purposes of Subsections (a), (b), (c), and (d), any nonprobate transfer, as defined in
Section 75-2-205, received by an heir is chargeable against the intestate share of such heir.
Section 13. Section 75-2-104 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-104. Requirement that heir survive decedent for 120 hours.
An individual who fails to survive the decedent by 120 hours is considered to have
predeceased the decedent for purposes of homestead allowance, exempt property, and intestate
succession, and the decedent's heirs are determined accordingly. If it is not established by clear and
convincing evidence that an individual who would otherwise be an heir survived the decedent by 120
hours, it is considered that the individual failed to survive for the required period. This section is
not to be applied if its application would result in a taking of intestate estate by the state under
Section 75-2-105.
Section 14. Section 75-2-105 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-105. No taker.
If there is no taker under the provisions of this chapter, the intestate estate passes to the state
for the benefit of the state school fund.
Section 15. Section 75-2-106 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-106. Definitions -- Per capita at each generation -- Terms in governing
instruments.
(1) As used in this section:
(a) "Deceased descendant," "deceased parent," or "deceased grandparent" means a
descendant, parent, or grandparent who either predeceased the decedent or is considered to have
predeceased the decedent under Section 75-2-104.
(b) "Surviving descendant" means a descendant who neither predeceased the decedent nor
is considered to have predeceased the decedent under Section 75-2-104.
(2) (a) If, under Subsection 75-2-103(1)(a), a decedent's intestate estate or a part thereof
passes "per capita at each generation" to the decedent's descendants, the estate or part thereof is
divided into as many equal shares as there are:
(i) surviving descendants in the generation nearest to the decedent which contains one or
more surviving descendants; and
(ii) deceased descendants in the same generation who left surviving descendants, if any.
(b) Each surviving descendant in the nearest generation is allocated one share.
(c) The remaining shares, if any, are combined and then divided in the same manner among
the surviving descendants of the deceased descendants as if the surviving descendants who were
allocated a share and their surviving descendants had predeceased the decedent.
(3) (a) If, under Subsection 75-2-103(1)(c) or (d), a decedent's intestate estate or a part
thereof passes "per capita at each generation" to the descendants of the decedent's deceased parents
or either of them or to the descendants of the decedent's deceased paternal or maternal grandparents
or either of them, the estate or part thereof is divided into as many equal shares as there are:
(i) surviving descendants in the generation nearest the deceased parents or either of them,
or the deceased grandparents or either of them, that contains one or more surviving descendants; and
(ii) deceased descendants in the same generation who left surviving descendants, if any.
(b) Each surviving descendant in the nearest generation is allocated one share.
(c) The remaining shares, if any, are combined and then divided in the same manner among
the surviving descendants of the deceased descendants as if the surviving descendants who were
allocated a share and their surviving descendants had predeceased the decedent.
(4) Any reference to this section found in a governing instrument for the definitions of "per
stirpes," "by representation," or "by right of representation" shall be considered a reference to
Section 75-2-709.
Section 16. Section 75-2-108 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-108. Afterborn heirs.
An individual in gestation at a particular time is treated as living at that time if the individual
lives 120 hours or more after birth.
Section 17. Section 75-2-109 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-109. Advancements.
(1) If an individual dies intestate as to all or a portion of his estate, property the decedent
gave during the decedent's lifetime to an individual who, at the decedent's death, is an heir is treated
as an advancement against the heir's intestate share only if:
(a) the decedent declared in a contemporaneous writing or the heir acknowledged in writing
that the gift is an advancement; or
(b) the decedent's contemporaneous writing or the heir's written acknowledgment otherwise
indicates that the gift is to be taken into account in computing the division and distribution of the
decedent's intestate estate.
(2) For purposes of Subsection (1), property advanced is valued as of the time the heir came
into possession or enjoyment of the property or as of the time of the decedent's death, whichever first
occurs.
(3) (a) If the recipient of the property fails to survive the decedent, the property is not taken
into account in computing the division and distribution of the decedent's intestate estate, unless the
decedent's contemporaneous writing provides otherwise.
(b) If the amount of the advancement exceeds the share of the heir receiving the same, the
heir is not required to refund any part of the advancement.
Section 18. Section 75-2-110 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-110. Debts to decedent.
A debt owed to a decedent is not charged against the intestate share of any individual except
the debtor. If the debtor fails to survive the decedent, the debt is not taken into account in computing
the intestate share of the debtor's descendants.
Section 19. Section 75-2-111 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-111. Alienage.
No individual is disqualified to take as an heir because the individual or an individual
through whom he claims is or has been an alien.
Section 20. Section 75-2-112 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-112. Dower and curtesy abolished.
The estates of dower and curtesy are abolished.
Section 21. Section 75-2-113 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-113. Individuals related to decedent through two lines.
An individual who is related to the decedent through two lines of relationship is entitled to
only a single share based on the relationship that would entitle the individual to the larger share.
Section 22. Section 75-2-114 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-114. Parent and child relationship.
(1) Except as provided in Subsections (2) and (3), for purposes of intestate succession by,
through, or from a person, an individual is the child of the individual's natural parents, regardless of
their marital status. The parent and child relationship may be established as provided in Sections
78-45a-7, 78-45a-10, and Title 78, Chapter 45a, Uniform Act on Paternity.
(2) An adopted individual is the child of the adopting parent or parents and not of the natural
parents, but adoption of a child by the spouse of either natural parent has no effect on:
(a) the relationship between the child and that natural parent; or
(b) the right of the child or a descendant of the child to inherit from or through the other
natural parent.
(3) Inheritance from or through a child by either natural parent or his kindred is precluded
unless that natural parent has openly treated the child as his, and has not refused to support the child.
Section 23. Section 75-2-201 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-201. Definitions.
As used in this part:
(1) "Decedent's nonprobate transfers to others," as used in sections other than Section
75-2-205, means the amounts that are included in the augmented estate under Section 75-2-205.
(2) "Fractional interest in property held in joint tenancy with the right of survivorship,"
whether the fractional interest is unilaterally severable or not, means the fraction, the numerator of
which is one and the denominator of which, if the decedent was a joint tenant, is one plus the number
of joint tenants who survive the decedent and which, if the decedent was not a joint tenant, is the
number of joint tenants.
(3) "Marriage," as it relates to a transfer by the decedent during marriage, means any
marriage of the decedent to the decedent's surviving spouse.
(4) "Nonadverse party" means a person who does not have a substantial beneficial interest
in the trust or other property arrangement that would be adversely affected by the exercise or
nonexercise of the power that the person possesses respecting the trust or other property
arrangement. A person having a general power of appointment over property is considered to have
a beneficial interest in the property.
(5) "Power" or "power of appointment" includes a power to designate the beneficiary of a
beneficiary designation.
(6) "Presently exercisable general power of appointment" means a power of appointment
under which, at the time in question, the decedent, whether or not the decedent then had the capacity
to exercise the power, held a power to create a present or future interest in himself, his creditors, his
estate, or creditors of his estate, and includes a power to revoke or invade the principal of a trust or
other property arrangement.
(7) "Probate estate" means property that would pass by intestate succession if the decedent
died without a valid will.
(8) "Property" includes values subject to a beneficiary designation.
(9) "Right to income" includes a right to payments under a commercial or private annuity,
an annuity trust, a unitrust, or a similar arrangement.
(10) "Transfer," as it relates to a transfer by or of the decedent, includes:
(a) an exercise or release of a presently exercisable general power of appointment held by
the decedent;
(b) a lapse at death of a presently exercisable general power of appointment held by the
decedent; and
(c) an exercise, release, or lapse of a general power of appointment that the decedent created
in himself and of a power described in Subsection 75-2-205(2)(b) that the decedent conferred on a
nonadverse party.
Section 24. Section 75-2-202 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-202. Elective share -- Supplemental elective share amount -- Effect of election on
statutory benefits -- Nondomicilary.
(1) The surviving spouse of a decedent who dies domiciled in Utah has a right of election,
under the limitations and conditions stated in this part, to take an elective-share amount equal to 1/3
of the augmented estate.
(2) If the sum of the amounts described in Section 75-2-207, Subsection 75-2-209(1)(a), and
that part of the elective-share amount payable from the decedent's probate estate and nonprobate
transfers to others under Subsections 75-2-209(2) and (3) is less than $25,000, the surviving spouse
is entitled to a supplemental elective-share amount equal to $25,000, minus the sum of the amounts
described in those sections. The supplemental elective-share amount is payable from the decedent's
probate estate and from recipients of the decedent's nonprobate transfers to others in the order of
priority set forth in Subsections 75-2-209(2) and (3).
(3) If the right of election is exercised by or on behalf of the surviving spouse, the surviving
spouse's homestead allowance, exempt property, and family allowance, if any, are charged against,
and are not in addition to, the elective-share and supplemental elective-share amounts. Any
nonprobate transfer, as provided in Section 75-2-206, received by the surviving spouse is also
chargeable against the elective-share and supplemental elective-share amounts.
(4) The right, if any, of the surviving spouse of a decedent who dies domiciled outside Utah
to take an elective share in property in Utah is governed by the law of the decedent's domicile at
death.
Section 25. Section 75-2-203 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-203. Composition of the augmented estate.
Subject to Section 75-2-208 which provides for exclusions, valuation, and overlapping
application, the value of the augmented estate, to the extent provided in Sections 75-2-204, 75-2-205,
75-2-206, and 75-2-207, consists of the sum of the values of all property, whether real or personal,
movable or immovable, tangible or intangible, wherever situated, that constitute the decedent's net
probate estate, the decedent's nonprobate transfers to others, the decedent's nonprobate transfers to
the surviving spouse, and the surviving spouse's property and nonprobate transfers to others.
Section 26. Section 75-2-204 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-204. Decedent's net probate estate.
The value of the augmented estate includes the value of the decedent's probate estate, reduced
by funeral and administration expenses, homestead allowance, family allowances, exempt property,
and enforceable claims.
Section 27. Section 75-2-205 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-205. Decedent's nonprobate transfers to others.
Unless excluded under Section 75-2-208, the value of the augmented estate includes the
value of the decedent's nonprobate transfers to others, not included under Section 75-2-204, of any
of the following types, in the amount provided respectively for each type of transfer:
(1) Property owned or owned in substance by the decedent immediately before death that
passed outside probate at the decedent's death. Property included under this category consists of:
(a) Property over which the decedent alone, immediately before death, held a presently
exercisable general power of appointment. The amount included is the value of the property subject
to the power, to the extent the property passed at the decedent's death, by exercise, release, lapse, in
default, or otherwise, to or for the benefit of any person other than the decedent's estate or surviving
spouse.
(b) The decedent's fractional interest in property held by the decedent in joint tenancy with
the right of survivorship. The amount included is the value of the decedent's fractional interest, to
the extent the fractional interest passed by right of survivorship at the decedent's death to a surviving
joint tenant other than the decedent's surviving spouse.
(c) The decedent's ownership interest in property or accounts held in POD, TOD, or
co-ownership registration with the right of survivorship. The amount included is the value of the
decedent's ownership interest, to the extent the decedent's ownership interest passed at the decedent's
death to or for the benefit of any person other than the decedent's estate or surviving spouse.
(d) Proceeds of insurance, including accidental death benefits, on the life of the decedent,
if the decedent owned the insurance policy immediately before death or if and to the extent the
decedent alone and immediately before death held a presently exercisable general power of
appointment over the policy or its proceeds. The amount included is the value of the proceeds, to
the extent they were payable at the decedent's death to or for the benefit of any person other than the
decedent's estate or surviving spouse, however, the amount included may not exceed the greater of
the cash surrender value of the policy immediately prior to the death of the decedent or the amount
of premiums paid on the policy during the decedent's life.
(2) Property transferred in any of the following forms by the decedent during marriage:
(a) Any irrevocable transfer in which the decedent retained the right to the possession or
enjoyment of, or to the income from, the property if and to the extent the decedent's right terminated
at or continued beyond the decedent's death. The amount included is the value of the fraction of the
property to which the decedent's right related, to the extent the fraction of the property passed outside
probate to or for the benefit of any person other than the decedent's estate or surviving spouse.
(b) Any transfer in which the decedent created a power over income or property, exercisable
by the decedent alone or in conjunction with any other person, or exercisable by a nonadverse party,
to or for the benefit of the decedent, creditors of the decedent, the decedent's estate, or creditors of
the decedent's estate. The amount included with respect to a power over property is the value of the
property subject to the power, and the amount included with respect to a power over income is the
value of the property that produces or produced the income, to the extent the power in either case
was exercisable at the decedent's death to or for the benefit of any person other than the decedent's
surviving spouse or to the extent the property passed at the decedent's death, by exercise, release,
lapse, in default, or otherwise, to or for the benefit of any person other than the decedent's estate or
surviving spouse. If the power is a power over both income and property and the preceding sentence
produces different amounts, the amount included is the greater amount.
(3) Property that passed during marriage and during the two-year period next preceding the
decedent's death as a result of a transfer by the decedent if the transfer was of any of the following
types:
(a) Any property that passed as a result of the termination of a right or interest in, or power
over, property that would have been included in the augmented estate under Subsection (1)(a), (b),
or (c), or under Subsection (2), if the right, interest, or power had not terminated until the decedent's
death. The amount included is the value of the property that would have been included under those
subsections if the property were valued at the time the right, interest, or power terminated, and is
included only to the extent the property passed upon termination to or for the benefit of any person
other than the decedent or the decedent's estate, spouse, or surviving spouse. As used in this
subsection, "termination," with respect to a right or interest in property, occurs when the right or
interest terminated by the terms of the governing instrument or the decedent transferred or
relinquished the right or interest, and, with respect to a power over property, occurs when the power
terminated by exercise, release, lapse, default, or otherwise, but, with respect to a power described
in Subsection (1)(a), "termination" occurs when the power terminated by exercise or release, but not
otherwise.
(b) Any transfer of or relating to an insurance policy on the life of the decedent if the
proceeds would have been included in the augmented estate under Subsection (1)(d) had the transfer
not occurred. The amount included is the value of the insurance proceeds to the extent the proceeds
were payable at the decedent's death to or for the benefit of any person other than the decedent's
estate or surviving spouse, however, the amount included may not exceed the greater of the cash
surrender value of the policy immediately prior to the death of the decedent or the amount of
premiums paid on the policy during the decedent's life.
(c) Any transfer of property, to the extent not otherwise included in the augmented estate,
made to or for the benefit of a person other than the decedent's surviving spouse. The amount
included is the value of the transferred property to the extent the aggregate transfers to any one donee
in either of the two years exceeded $10,000.
Section 28. Section 75-2-206 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-206. Decedent's nonprobate transfers to the surviving spouse.
Excluding property passing to the surviving spouse under the federal Social Security system
and excluded under Section 75-2-208, the value of the augmented estate includes the value of the
decedent's nonprobate transfers to the decedent's surviving spouse, which consist of all property that
passed outside probate at the decedent's death from the decedent to the surviving spouse by reason
of the decedent's death, including:
(1) the decedent's fractional interest in property held as a joint tenant with the right of
survivorship, to the extent that the decedent's fractional interest passed to the surviving spouse as
surviving joint tenant;
(2) the decedent's ownership interest in property or accounts held in co-ownership
registration with the right of survivorship, to the extent the decedent's ownership interest passed to
the surviving spouse as surviving co-owner; and
(3) all other property that would have been included in the augmented estate under
Subsection 75-2-205(1) or (2) had it passed to or for the benefit of a person other than the decedent's
spouse, surviving spouse, the decedent, or the decedent's creditors, estate, or estate creditors.
Section 29. Section 75-2-207 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-207. Surviving spouse's property and nonprobate transfers to others -- Included
property -- Time of valuation.
(1) Except to the extent included in the augmented estate under Section 75-2-204 or
75-2-206 or excluded under Section 75-2-208, the value of the augmented estate includes the value
of:
(a) property that was owned by the decedent's surviving spouse at the decedent's death,
including:
(i) the surviving spouse's fractional interest in property held in joint tenancy with the right
of survivorship;
(ii) the surviving spouse's ownership interest in property or accounts held in co-ownership
registration with the right of survivorship; and
(iii) property that passed to the surviving spouse by reason of the decedent's death, but not
including the spouse's right to homestead allowance, family allowance, exempt property, or
payments under the federal Social Security system; and
(b) property that would have been included in the surviving spouse's nonprobate transfers
to others, other than the spouse's fractional and ownership interests included under Subsection
(1)(a)(i) or (ii), had the spouse been the decedent.
(2) Property included under this section is valued at the decedent's death, taking the fact that
the decedent predeceased the spouse into account, but, for purposes of Subsections (1)(a)(i) and (ii),
the values of the spouse's fractional and ownership interests are determined immediately before the
decedent's death if the decedent was then a joint tenant or a co-owner of the property or accounts.
For purposes of Subsection (1)(b), proceeds of insurance that would have been included in the
spouse's nonprobate transfers to others under Subsection 75-2-205(1)(d) are not valued as if the
spouse were deceased.
(3) The value of property included under this section is reduced by enforceable claims
against the surviving spouse.
Section 30. Section 75-2-208 is enacted to read:
75-2-208. Exclusions, valuation, and overlapping application.
(1) The value of any separate property of the decedent or the decedent's surviving spouse
is excluded from the augmented estate even if it otherwise would be included in the augmented
estate under Sections 75-2-204, 75-2-205, 75-2-206, and 75-2-207. Property is separate property
if:
(a) owned at the date of the most recent marriage of the decedent and the decedent's
surviving spouse;
(b) acquired by gift or disposition at death from a person other than the decedent or the
decedent's surviving spouse;
(c) acquired in exchange for or with the proceeds of other separate property;
(d) designated as separate property by written waiver under Section 75-2-213; or
(e) acquired as a recovery for personal injury but only to the extent attributable to expenses
paid or otherwise satisfied from separate property.
(2) Income attributable to investment, rental, licensing or other use of separate property
during the most recent marriage of the decedent and the decedent's surviving spouse is separate
property.
(3) Appreciation in the value of separate property during the most recent marriage of the
decedent and the decedent's surviving spouse is separate property.
(4) Except as provided in this subsection, any increase in the value of separate property due
to improvements to or the reduction in debt owed against separate property during the most recent
marriage of the decedent and the decedent's surviving spouse is separate property. An amount equal
to any payment for improvements to or the reduction in debt owed against separate property of the
decedent made during the most recent marriage of the decedent and the decedent's surviving spouse
from the joint or commingled funds of the decedent and the decedent's surviving spouse, or from the
separate property of the surviving spouse, shall not be separate property to the extent of the amount
actually paid for the improvements or the amount actually paid for the reduction in debt, including
principal, interest, and other payments under the note, owed against separate property. The amount
that is determined not to be separate property may not exceed the value of the separate property.
(5) All property of the decedent or the decedent's surviving spouse is rebuttably presumed
not to be separate property. Separate property that has been commingled with other property that
is not separate property shall be rebuttably presumed not to be separate property unless it can be
shown what percentage or amount of the commingled property came from separate property, in
which case the amount or percentage of commingled property will remain separate property.
Property held by the decedent and the decedent's surviving spouse as joint tenants at the date of the
decedent's death shall not be separate property.
(6) The value of any property is excluded from the decedent's nonprobate transfers to others:
(a) to the extent the decedent received adequate and full consideration in money or money's
worth for a transfer of the property; or
(b) if the property was transferred with the written joinder of, or if the transfer was consented
to in writing by, the surviving spouse.
(7) The value of property:
(a) included in the augmented estate under Section 75-2-205, 75-2-206, or 75-2-207 is
reduced in each category by enforceable claims against the included property; and
(b) includes the commuted value of any present or future interest and the commuted value
of amounts payable under any trust, life insurance settlement option, annuity contract, public or
private pension, disability compensation, death benefit or retirement plan, or any similar
arrangement, exclusive of the federal Social Security system.
(8) In case of overlapping application to the same property of the section or subsections of
Section 75-2-205, 75-2-206, or 75-2-207, the property is included in the augmented estate under the
provision yielding the greatest value, and under only one overlapping provision if they all yield the
same value.
Section 31. Section 75-2-209 is enacted to read:
75-2-209. Sources from which elective share payable -- Elective share amount --
Unsatisfied balance.
(1) In a proceeding for an elective share, the following are applied first to satisfy the
elective-share amount and to reduce or eliminate any contributions due from the decedent's probate
estate and recipients of the decedent's nonprobate transfers to others:
(a) amounts included in the augmented estate under Section 75-2-204 which pass or have
passed to the surviving spouse by testate or intestate succession and amounts included in the
augmented estate under Section 75-2-206;
(b) amounts included in the augmented estate under Section 75-2-207; and
(c) the aggregate value of the decedent's separate property as defined in Section 75-2-208
that passes or has passed to the surviving spouse by testate or intestate succession or by nonprobate
transfer under Section 75-2-206 that are not included in the augmented estate.
(2) If, after the application of Subsection (1), the elective-share amount is not fully satisfied
or the surviving spouse is entitled to a supplemental elective-share amount, amounts included in the
decedent's probate estate and in the decedent's nonprobate transfers to others, other than amounts
included under Subsection 75-2-205(3)(a) or (c), are applied first to satisfy the unsatisfied balance
of the elective-share amount or the supplemental elective-share amount. The decedent's probate
estate and that portion of the decedent's nonprobate transfers to others are so applied that liability
for the unsatisfied balance of the elective-share amount or for the supplemental elective-share
amount is equitably apportioned among the recipients of the decedent's probate estate and of that
portion of the decedent's nonprobate transfers to others in proportion to the value of their interests
therein.
(3) If, after the application of Subsections (1) and (2), the elective-share or supplemental
elective-share amount is not fully satisfied, the remaining portion of the decedent's nonprobate
transfers to others is so applied that liability for the unsatisfied balance of the elective-share or
supplemental elective-share amount is equitably apportioned among the recipients of the remaining
portion of the decedent's nonprobate transfers to others in proportion to the value of their interests
therein.
Section 32. Section 75-2-210 is enacted to read:
75-2-210. Personal liability of recipients.
(1) Only original recipients of the decedent's nonprobate transfers to others, and the donees
of the recipients of the decedent's nonprobate transfers to others, to the extent the donees have the
property or its proceeds, are liable to make a proportional contribution toward satisfaction of the
surviving spouse's elective-share or supplemental elective-share amount. A person liable to make
contribution may choose to give up the proportional part of the decedent's nonprobate transfers to
him or to pay the value of the amount for which he is liable.
(2) If any section or subsection of this part is preempted by federal law with respect to a
payment, an item of property, or any other benefit included in the decedent's nonprobate transfers
to others, a person who, not for value, receives the payment, item of property, or any other benefit
is obligated to return the payment, item of property, or benefit, or is personally liable for the amount
of the payment or the value of that item of property or benefit, as provided in Section 75-2-209, to
the person who would have been entitled to it were that section or subsection not preempted.
Section 33. Section 75-2-211 is enacted to read:
75-2-211. Proceeding for elective share -- Time limit.
(1) Except as provided in Subsection (2), the election shall be made by filing in the court
and mailing or delivering to the personal representative, if any, a petition for the elective share
within nine months after the date of the decedent's death, or within six months after the probate of
the decedent's will, whichever limitation later expires. The surviving spouse shall give notice of the
time and place set for hearing to persons interested in the estate and to the distributees and recipients
of portions of the augmented estate whose interests will be adversely affected by the taking of the
elective share. Except as provided in Subsection (2), the decedent's nonprobate transfers to others
are not included within the augmented estate for the purpose of computing the elective-share, if the
petition is filed more than nine months after the decedent's death.
(2) Within nine months after the decedent's death, the surviving spouse may petition the
court for an extension of time for making an election. If, within nine months after the decedent's
death, the spouse gives notice of the petition to all persons interested in the decedent's nonprobate
transfers to others, the court for cause shown by the surviving spouse may extend the time for
election. If the court grants the spouse's petition for an extension, the decedent's nonprobate
transfers to others are not excluded from the augmented estate for the purpose of computing the
elective-share and supplemental elective-share amounts, if the spouse makes an election by filing
in the court and mailing or delivering to the personal representative, if any, a petition for the elective
share within the time allowed by the extension.
(3) The surviving spouse may withdraw his demand for an elective share at any time before
entry of a final determination by the court.
(4) After notice and hearing, the court shall determine the elective-share and supplemental
elective-share amounts, and shall order its payment from the assets of the augmented estate or by
contribution as appears appropriate under Sections 75-2-209 and 75-2-210. If it appears that a fund
or property included in the augmented estate has not come into the possession of the personal
representative, or has been distributed by the personal representative, the court nevertheless shall fix
the liability of any person who has any interest in the fund or property or who has possession thereof,
whether as trustee or otherwise. The proceeding may be maintained against fewer than all persons
against whom relief could be sought, but no person is subject to contribution in any greater amount
than he would have been under Sections 75-2-209 and 75-2-210 had relief been secured against all
persons subject to contribution.
(5) An order or judgment of the court may be enforced as necessary in suit for contribution
or payment in other courts of Utah or other jurisdictions.
Section 34. Section 75-2-212 is enacted to read:
75-2-212. Right of election personal to surviving spouse -- Incapacitated surviving
spouse -- Custodial trust.
(1) The right of election may be exercised only by a surviving spouse who is living when
the petition for the elective share is filed in the court under Subsection 75-2-211(1). If the election
is not exercised by the surviving spouse personally, it may be exercised on the surviving spouse's
behalf by his conservator, guardian, or agent under the authority of a power of attorney.
(2) If the election is exercised on behalf of a surviving spouse who is an incapacitated
person, the court shall set aside that portion of the elective-share and supplemental elective-share
amounts due from the decedent's probate estate and recipients of the decedent's nonprobate transfers
to others under Subsections 75-2-209(2) and (3) and shall appoint a trustee to administer that
property for the support of the surviving spouse. For the purposes of this subsection, an election on
behalf of a surviving spouse by an agent under a durable power of attorney is presumed to be on
behalf of a surviving spouse who is an incapacitated person. The trustee shall administer the trust
in accordance with the following terms and such additional terms as the court determines
appropriate:
(a) Expenditures of income and principal may be made in the manner, when, and to the
extent that the trustee determines suitable and proper for the surviving spouse's support, without
court order but with regard to other support, income, and property of the surviving spouse exclusive
of benefits of medical or other forms of assistance from any state or federal government or
governmental agency for which the surviving spouse shall qualify on the basis of need.
(b) During the surviving spouse's incapacity, neither the surviving spouse nor anyone acting
on behalf of the surviving spouse has a power to terminate the trust; but if the surviving spouse
regains capacity, the surviving spouse then acquires the power to terminate the trust and acquire full
ownership of the trust property free of trust, by delivering to the trustee a writing signed by the
surviving spouse declaring the termination.
(c) Upon the surviving spouse's death, the trustee shall transfer the unexpended trust
property in the following order:
(i) under the residuary clause, if any, of the will of the predeceased spouse against whom the
elective share was taken, as if that predeceased spouse died immediately after the surviving spouse;
or
(ii) to the predeceased spouse's heirs under Section 75-2-711.
Section 35. Section 75-2-213 is enacted to read:
75-2-213. Waiver of right to elect and of other rights.
(1) The right of election of a surviving spouse and the rights of the surviving spouse to
homestead allowance, exempt property, and family allowance, or any of them, may be waived,
wholly or partially, before or after marriage, by a written contract, agreement, or waiver signed by
the surviving spouse.
(2) A surviving spouse's waiver is not enforceable if the surviving spouse proves that:
(a) he did not execute the waiver voluntarily; or
(b) the waiver was unconscionable when it was executed and, before execution of the
waiver, he:
(i) was not provided a fair and reasonable disclosure of the property or financial obligations
of the decedent;
(ii) did not voluntarily and expressly waive, in writing, any right to disclosure of the
property or financial obligations of the decedent beyond the disclosure provided; and
(iii) did not have, or reasonably could not have had, an adequate knowledge of the property
or financial obligations of the decedent.
(3) An issue of unconscionability of a waiver is for decision by the court as a matter of law.
(4) Unless it provides to the contrary, a waiver of "all rights," or equivalent language, in the
property or estate of a present or prospective spouse or a complete property settlement entered into
after or in anticipation of separation or divorce is a waiver of all rights of elective share, homestead
allowance, exempt property, and family allowance by each spouse in the property of the other and
a renunciation by each of all benefits that would otherwise pass to him from the other by intestate
succession or by virtue of any will executed before the waiver or property settlement.
Section 36. Section 75-2-214 is enacted to read:
75-2-214. Protection of payors and other third parties.
(1) Although under Section 75-2-205 a payment, item of property, or other benefit is
included in the decedent's nonprobate transfers to others, a payor or other third party is not liable for
having made a payment or transferred an item of property or other benefit to a beneficiary designated
in a governing instrument, or for having taken any other action in good faith reliance on the validity
of a governing instrument, upon request and satisfactory proof of the decedent's death, before the
payor or other third party received written notice from the surviving spouse or spouse's
representative of an intention to file a petition for the elective share or that a petition for the elective
share has been filed. A payor or other third party is liable for payments made or other actions taken
after the payor or other third party received written notice of an intention to file a petition for the
elective share or that a petition for the elective share has been filed.
(2) A written notice of intention to file a petition for the elective share or that a petition for
the elective share has been filed shall be mailed to the payor's or other third party's main office or
home by registered or certified mail, return receipt requested, or served upon the payor or other third
party in the same manner as a summons in a civil action. Upon receipt of written notice of intention
to file a petition for the elective share or that a petition for the elective share has been filed, a payor
or other third party may pay any amount owed or transfer or deposit any item of property held by
it to or with the court having jurisdiction of the probate proceedings relating to the decedent's estate,
or if no proceedings have been commenced, to or with the court having jurisdiction of probate
proceedings relating to decedents' estates located in the county of the decedent's residence. The
court shall hold the funds or item of property, and, upon its determination under Subsection
75-2-211(4), shall order disbursement in accordance with the determination. If no petition is filed
in the court within the specified time under Subsection 75-2-211(1) or, if filed, the demand for an
elective share is withdrawn under Subsection 75-2-211(3), the court shall order disbursement to the
designated beneficiary. Payments or transfers to the court or deposits made into court discharge the
payor or other third party from all claims for amounts so paid or the value of property so transferred
or deposited.
(3) Upon petition to the probate court by the beneficiary designated in a governing
instrument, the court may order that all or part of the property be paid to the beneficiary in an
amount and subject to conditions consistent with this part.
Section 37. Section 75-2-301 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-301. Entitlement of spouse -- Premarital will.
(1) If a testator's surviving spouse married the testator after the testator executed his will,
the surviving spouse is entitled to receive, as an intestate share, no less than the value of the share
of the estate he would have received if the testator had died intestate as to that portion of the
testator's estate, if any, that neither is devised to a child of the testator who was born before the
testator married the surviving spouse and who is not a child of the surviving spouse nor is devised
to a descendant of such a child or passes under Section 75-2-603 or 75-2-604 to such a child or to
a descendant of such a child, unless:
(a) it appears from the will or other evidence that the will was made in contemplation of the
testator's marriage to the surviving spouse;
(b) the will expresses the intention that it is to be effective notwithstanding any subsequent
marriage; or
(c) the testator provided for the spouse by transfer outside the will and the intent that the
transfer be in lieu of a testamentary provision is shown by the testator's statements or is reasonably
inferred from the amount of the transfer or other evidence.
(2) In satisfying the share provided by this section, devises made by the will to the testator's
surviving spouse, if any, are applied first, and other devises, other than a devise to a child of the
testator who was born before the testator married the surviving spouse and who is not a child of the
surviving spouse or a devise or substitute gift under Section 75-2-603 or 75-2-604 to a descendant
of such a child, abate as provided in Section 75-3-902.
Section 38. Section 75-2-302 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-302. Omitted children.
(1) Except as provided in Subsection (2), if a testator fails to provide in his will for any of
his children born or adopted after the execution of the will, the omitted after-born or after-adopted
child receives a share in the estate as follows:
(a) If the testator had no child living when he executed the will, an omitted after-born or
after-adopted child receives a share in the estate equal in value to that which the child would have
received had the testator died intestate, unless the will devised all or substantially all of the estate
to the other parent of the omitted child and that other parent survives the testator and is entitled to
take under the will.
(b) If the testator had one or more children living when he executed the will, and the will
devised property or an interest in property to one or more of the then-living children, an omitted
after-born or after-adopted child is entitled to share in the testator's estate as follows:
(i) The portion of the testator's estate in which the omitted after-born or after-adopted child
is entitled to share is limited to devises made to the testator's then-living children under the will.
(ii) The omitted after-born or after-adopted child is entitled to receive the share of the
testator's estate, as limited in Subsection (i), that the child would have received had the testator
included all omitted after-born and after-adopted children with the children to whom devises were
made under the will and had given an equal share of the estate to each child.
(iii) To the extent feasible, the interest granted an omitted after-born or after-adopted child
under this section shall be of the same character, whether equitable or legal, present or future, as that
devised to the testator's then-living children under the will.
(iv) In satisfying a share provided by this section, devises to the testator's children who were
living when the will was executed abate ratably. In abating the devises of the then-living children,
the court shall preserve to the maximum extent possible the character of the testamentary plan
adopted by the testator.
(2) Neither Subsection (1)(a) nor Subsection (1)(b) applies if:
(a) it appears from the will that the omission was intentional; or
(b) the testator provided for the omitted after-born or after-adopted child by transfer outside
the will and the intent that the transfer be in lieu of a testamentary provision is shown by the
testator's statements or is reasonably inferred from the amount of the transfer or other evidence.
(3) If at the time of execution of the will the testator fails to provide in his will for a living
child solely because he believes the child to be dead, the child is entitled to share in the estate as if
the child were an omitted after-born or after-adopted child.
(4) In satisfying a share provided by Subsection (1)(a), devises made by the will abate under
Section 75-3-902.
Section 39. Section 75-2-401 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-401. Exempt property and allowances -- Applicable law.
This part applies to the estate of a decedent who dies domiciled in Utah. Rights to homestead
allowance, exempt property, and family allowance for a decedent who dies not domiciled in Utah
are governed by the law of the decedent's domicile at death.
Section 40. Section 75-2-402 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-402. Homestead allowance.
A decedent's surviving spouse is entitled to a homestead allowance of $15,000. If there is
no surviving spouse, each minor child and each dependent child of the decedent is entitled to a
homestead allowance amounting to $15,000 divided by the number of minor and dependent children
of the decedent. The homestead allowance is exempt from and has priority over all claims of the
estate. Unless otherwise provided by the will or governing instrument, the homestead allowance is
chargeable against any benefit or share passing to the surviving spouse, minor, or dependent child,
by the will of the decedent, by intestate succession, by way of elective share, and by way of
nonprobate transfers as defined in Sections 75-2-205 and 75-2-206.
Section 41. Section 75-2-403 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-403. Exempt property.
In addition to the homestead allowance, the decedent's surviving spouse is entitled from the
estate to a value, not exceeding $10,000 in excess of any security interests therein, in household
furniture, automobiles, furnishings, appliances, and personal effects. If there is no surviving spouse,
the decedent's children are entitled jointly to the same value. If encumbered chattels are selected and
the value in excess of security interests, plus that of other exempt property, is less than $10,000, or
if there is not $10,000 worth of exempt property in the estate, the spouse or children are entitled to
other assets of the estate, if any, to the extent necessary to make up the $10,000 value. Rights to
exempt property and assets needed to make up a deficiency of exempt property have priority over
all claims against the estate, but the right to any assets to make up a deficiency of exempt property
abates as necessary to permit earlier payment of homestead allowance and family allowance. Unless
otherwise provided by the will or governing instrument, the exempt property allowance is chargeable
against any benefit or share passing to the surviving spouse, if any, or if there is no surviving spouse,
to the decedent's children, by the will of the decedent, by intestate succession, by way of elective
share, and by way of nonprobate transfers as defined in Sections 75-2-205 and 75-2-206.
Section 42. Section 75-2-404 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-404. Family allowance.
(1) In addition to the right to homestead allowance and exempt property, the decedent's
surviving spouse and minor children whom the decedent was obligated to support and children who
were in fact being supported by the decedent are entitled to a reasonable allowance in money out of
the estate for their maintenance during the period of administration, which allowance may not
continue for longer than one year if the estate is inadequate to discharge allowed claims. The
allowance may be paid as a lump sum or in periodic installments. It is payable to the surviving
spouse, if living, for the use of the surviving spouse and minor and dependent children; otherwise
to the children, or persons having their care and custody. If a minor child or dependent child is not
living with the surviving spouse, the allowance may be made partially to the child or his guardian
or other person having the child's care and custody, and partially to the spouse, as their needs may
appear. The family allowance is exempt from and has priority over all claims except the homestead
allowance.
(2) Unless otherwise provided by the will or governing instrument, the family allowance is
chargeable against any benefit or share passing to the surviving spouse or minor children, by the will
of the decedent, by intestate succession, by way of elective share, and by way of nonprobate transfers
as defined in Sections 75-2-205 and 75-2-206. The death of any person entitled to family allowance
terminates the right to allowances not yet paid.
Section 43. Section 75-2-405 is enacted to read:
75-2-405. Source, determination, and documentation.
(1) If the estate is otherwise sufficient, property specifically devised may not be used to
satisfy rights to homestead allowance or exempt property. Subject to this restriction, the surviving
spouse, guardians of minor children, or children who are adults may select property of the estate as
homestead allowance and exempt property. The personal representative may make those selections
if the surviving spouse, the children, or the guardians of the minor children are unable or fail to do
so within a reasonable time or there is no guardian of a minor child. The personal representative
may execute an instrument or deed of distribution to establish the ownership of property taken as
homestead allowance or exempt property. The personal representative may determine the family
allowance in a lump sum not exceeding $18,000 or periodic installments not exceeding $1,500 per
month for one year, and may disburse funds of the estate in payment of the family allowance and
any part of the homestead allowance payable in cash. The personal representative or an interested
person aggrieved by any selection, determination, payment, proposed payment, or failure to act
under this section may petition the court for appropriate relief, which may include a family
allowance other than that which the personal representative determined or could have determined.
(2) If the right to an elective share is exercised on behalf of a surviving spouse who is an
incapacitated person, the personal representative may add any unexpended portions payable under
the homestead allowance, exempt property, and family allowance to the trust established under
Subsection 75-2-212(2).
Section 44. Section 75-2-501 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-501. Who may make will.
An individual 18 or more years of age who is of sound mind may make a will.
Section 45. Section 75-2-502 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-502. Execution -- Witnessed wills -- Holographic wills.
(1) Except as provided in Subsection (2) and in Sections 75-2-503, 75-2-506, and 75-2-513,
a will shall be:
(a) in writing;
(b) signed by the testator or in the testator's name by some other individual in the testator's
conscious presence and by the testator's direction; and
(c) signed by at least two individuals, each of whom signed within a reasonable time after
he witnessed either the signing of the will as described in Subsection (1)(b) or the testator's
acknowledgment of that signature or acknowledgment of the will.
(2) A will that does not comply with Subsection (1) is valid as a holographic will, whether
or not witnessed, if the signature and material portions of the document are in the testator's
handwriting.
(3) Intent that the document constitutes the testator's will can be established by extrinsic
evidence, including, for holographic wills, portions of the document that are not in the testator's
handwriting.
Section 46. Section 75-2-503 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-503. Writings intended as wills.
Although a document or writing added upon a document was not executed in compliance
with Section 75-2-502, the document or writing is treated as if it had been executed in compliance
with that section if the proponent of the document or writing establishes by clear and convincing
evidence that the decedent intended the document or writing to constitute:
(1) the decedent's will;
(2) a partial or complete revocation of the will;
(3) an addition to or an alteration of the will; or
(4) a partial or complete revival of his formerly revoked will or of a formerly revoked
portion of the will.
Section 47. Section 75-2-504 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-504. Self-proved will.
(1) A will may be simultaneously executed, attested, and made self-proved, by
acknowledgment thereof by the testator and affidavits of the witnesses, each made before an officer
authorized to administer oaths under the laws of the state in which execution occurs, whether or not
that officer is also a witness to the will, and evidenced by the officer's certificate, under official seal,
in substantially the following form:
I, _______, the testator, sign my name to this instrument this ____ day of _______, and being
first duly sworn, do hereby declare to the undersigned authority that I sign and execute this
instrument as my will and that I sign it willingly (or willingly direct another to sign for me), that I
execute it as my free and voluntary act for the purposes therein expressed, and that I am 18 years of
age or older, of sound mind, and under no constraint or undue influence.
__________________
Testator
We, _______, _______, the witnesses, sign our names to this instrument, being first duly
sworn, and do hereby declare to the undersigned authority that the testator signs and executes this
instrument as [his] [her] will and that [he] [she] signs it willingly (or willingly directs another to sign
for [him] [her] ), and that each of us, in the presence and hearing of the testator, hereby signs this
will as witness to the testator's signing, and that to the best of our knowledge the testator is 18 years
of age or older, of sound mind, and under no constraint or undue influence.
___________________
Witness
__________________
Witness
State of _______
County of _______
Subscribed, sworn to and acknowledged before me by _______, the testator, and subscribed
and sworn to before me by _______, and _______, witnesses, this ____ day of _______.
(Signed) _______________
________________________
(Official capacity of officer)
(2) An attested will may be made self-proved at any time after its execution by the
acknowledgment thereof by the testator and the affidavits of the witnesses, each made before an
officer authorized to administer oaths under the laws of the state in which the acknowledgment
occurs and evidenced by the officer's certificate, under the official seal, attached or annexed to the
will in substantially the following form:
State of _______
County of _______
We, _______, _______, and _______, the testator and the witnesses,
respectively, whose names are signed to the attached or foregoing instrument, being
first duly sworn, do hereby declare to the undersigned authority that the testator
signed and executed the instrument as the testator's will and that [he] [she] had signed willingly (or
willingly directed another to sign for [him] [her] ), and that [he]
[she] executed it as [his] [her] free and voluntary act for the purposes therein
expressed, and that each of the witnesses, in the presence and hearing of the testator,
signed the will as witness and that to the best of [his] [her] knowledge the testator
was at that time eighteen years or age or older, of sound mind, and under no
constraint or undue influence.
__________________
Testator
__________________
Witness
__________________
Witness
Subscribed, sworn to, and acknowledged before me by _______, the testator, and subscribed
and sworn to before me by _______, and _______, witnesses, this ____ day of _______.
(Signed) ___________________
___________________________
(Official capacity of officer)
(3) A signature affixed to a self-proving affidavit attached to a will is considered a signature
affixed to the will, if necessary to prove the will's due execution.
(4) The notarization of will provisions of this section preempt conflicting provisions in other
sections of the Utah Code whether the will was executed prior to or after July 1, 1998.
Section 48. Section 75-2-505 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-505. Who may witness.
(1) An individual generally competent to be a witness may act as a witness to a will.
(2) The signing of a will by an interested witness does not invalidate the will or any
provision of it.
Section 49. Section 75-2-506 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-506. Choice of law as to execution.
A written will is valid if executed in compliance with Section 75-2-502 or 75-2-503 or if its
execution complies with the law at the time of execution of the place where the will is executed, or
of the law of the place where at the time of execution or at the time of death the testator is domiciled,
has a place of abode, or is a national.
Section 50. Section 75-2-507 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-507. Revocation by writing or by act.
(1) A will or any part thereof is revoked:
(a) by executing a subsequent will that revokes the previous will or part expressly or by
inconsistency; or
(b) by performing a revocatory act on the will, if the testator performed the act with the
intent and for the purpose of revoking the will or part or if another individual performed the act in
the testator's conscious presence and by the testator's direction. For purposes of this subsection,
"revocatory act on the will" includes burning, tearing, canceling, obliterating, or destroying the will
or any part of it. A burning, tearing, or canceling is a "revocatory act on the will," whether or not
the burn, tear, or cancellation touched any of the words on the will.
(2) If a subsequent will does not expressly revoke a previous will, the execution of the
subsequent will wholly revokes the previous will by inconsistency if the testator intended the
subsequent will to replace rather than supplement the previous will.
(3) The testator is presumed to have intended a subsequent will to replace rather than
supplement a previous will if the subsequent will makes a complete disposition of the testator's
estate. If this presumption arises and is not rebutted by clear and convincing evidence, the previous
will is revoked; only the subsequent will is operative on the testator's death.
(4) The testator is presumed to have intended a subsequent will to supplement rather than
replace a previous will if the subsequent will does not make a complete disposition of the testator's
estate. If this presumption arises and is not rebutted by clear and convincing evidence, the
subsequent will revokes the previous will only to the extent the subsequent will is inconsistent with
the previous will; each will is fully operative on the testator's death to the extent they are not
inconsistent.
Section 51. Section 75-2-508 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-508. Revocation by change of circumstances.
Except as provided in Sections 75-2-803 and 75-2-804, a change of circumstances does not
revoke a will or any part of it.
Section 52. Section 75-2-509 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-509. Revival of revoked will.
(1) If a subsequent will that wholly revoked a previous will is thereafter revoked by a
revocatory act under Subsection 75-2-507(1)(b), the previous will remains revoked unless it is
revived. The previous will is revived if it is evident from the circumstances of the revocation of the
subsequent will or from the testator's contemporary or subsequent declarations that the testator
intended the previous will to take effect as executed.
(2) If a subsequent will that partly revoked a previous will is thereafter revoked by a
revocatory act under Subsection 75-2-507(1)(b), a revoked part of the previous will is revived unless
it is evident from the circumstances of the revocation of the subsequent will or from the testator's
contemporary or subsequent declarations that the testator did not intend the revoked part to take
effect as executed.
(3) If a subsequent will that revoked a previous will in whole or in part is thereafter revoked
by another later will, the previous will remains revoked in whole or in part, unless it or its revoked
part is revived. The previous will or its revoked part is revived to the extent it appears from the
terms of the later will that the testator intended the previous will to take effect.
Section 53. Section 75-2-510 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-510. Incorporation by reference.
A writing in existence when a will is executed may be incorporated by reference if the
language of the will manifests this intent and describes the writing sufficiently to permit its
identification.
Section 54. Section 75-2-511 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-511. Testamentary additions to trusts.
(1) A will may validly devise property to the trustee of a trust established or to be
established:
(a) during the testator's lifetime by the testator, by the testator and some other person, or by
some other person, including a funded or unfunded life insurance trust, although the settlor has
reserved any or all rights of ownership of the insurance contracts; or
(b) at the testator's death by the testator's devise to the trustee, if the trust is identified in the
testator's will and its terms are set forth in a written instrument, other than a will, executed before,
concurrently with, or after the execution of the testator's will or in another individual's will if that
other individual has predeceased the testator, regardless of the existence, size, or character of the
corpus of the trust. The devise is not invalid because the trust is amendable or revocable, or because
the trust was amended after the execution of the will or the testator's death.
(2) Unless the testator's will provides otherwise, property devised to a trust described in
Subsection (1) is not held under a testamentary trust of the testator, but it becomes a part of the trust
to which it is devised, and shall be administered and disposed of in accordance with the provisions
of the governing instrument setting forth the terms of the trust, including any amendments thereto
made before or after the testator's death.
(3) Unless the testator's will provides otherwise, a revocation or termination of the trust
before the testator's death causes the devise to lapse.
Section 55. Section 75-2-512 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-512. Events of independent significance.
A will may dispose of property by reference to acts and events that have significance apart
from their effect upon the dispositions made by the will, whether they occur before or after the
execution of the will or before or after the testator's death. The execution or revocation of another
individual's will is such an event.
Section 56. Section 75-2-513 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-513. Separate writing identifying devise of certain types of tangible personal
property.
Whether or not the provisions relating to holographic wills apply, a will may refer to a
written statement or list to dispose of items of tangible personal property not otherwise specifically
disposed of by the will, other than money. To be admissible under this section as evidence of the
intended disposition, the writing shall be signed by the testator and shall describe the items and the
devisees with reasonable certainty. The writing may be referred to as one to be in existence at the
time of the testator's death; it may be prepared before or after the execution of the will; it may be
altered by the testator after its preparation; and it may be a writing that has no significance apart
from its effect on the dispositions made by the will.
Section 57. Section 75-2-514 is enacted to read:
75-2-514. Contracts concerning succession.
(1) A contract to make a will or devise, or not to revoke a will or devise, or to die intestate,
if executed after July 1, 1998, may be established only by:
(a) provisions of a will stating material provisions of the contract;
(b) an express reference in a will to a contract and extrinsic evidence proving the terms of
the contract; or
(c) a writing signed by the decedent evidencing the contract.
(2) The execution of a joint will or mutual wills does not create a presumption of a contract
not to revoke the will or wills.
Section 58. Section 75-2-515 is enacted to read:
75-2-515. Penalty clause for contest.
A provision in a will purporting to penalize an interested person for contesting the will or
instituting other proceedings relating to the estate is unenforceable if probable cause exists for
instituting proceedings.
Section 59. Section 75-2-601 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-601. Scope.
In the absence of a finding of a contrary intention, the rules of construction in this part
control the construction of a will.
Section 60. Section 75-2-602 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-602. Will construed to pass all property and after-acquired property.
A will is construed to pass all property the testator owns at death and all property acquired
by the estate after the testator's death.
Section 61. Section 75-2-603 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-603. Definitions -- Antilapse -- Deceased devisee -- Class gifts -- Substitute gifts.
(1) As used in this section:
(a) "Alternative devise" means a devise that is expressly created by the will and, under the
terms of the will, can take effect instead of another devise on the happening of one or more events,
including survival of the testator or failure to survive the testator, whether an event is expressed in
condition-precedent, condition-subsequent, or any other form. A residuary clause constitutes an
alternative devise with respect to a nonresiduary devise only if the will specifically provides that,
upon lapse or failure, the nonresiduary devise, or nonresiduary devises in general, pass under the
residuary clause.
(b) "Class member" includes an individual who fails to survive the testator but who would
have taken under a devise in the form of a class gift had he survived the testator.
(c) "Devise" includes an alternative devise, a devise in the form of a class gift, and an
exercise of a power of appointment.
(d) "Devisee" includes:
(i) a class member if the devise is in the form of a class gift;
(ii) an individual or class member who was deceased at the time the testator executed his will
as well as an individual or class member who was then living but who failed to survive the testator;
and
(iii) an appointee under a power of appointment exercised by the testator's will.
(e) "Stepchild" means a child of the surviving, deceased, or former spouse of the testator or
of the donor of a power of appointment, and not of the testator or donor.
(f) "Surviving devisee" or "surviving descendant" means a devisee or a descendant who
neither predeceased the testator nor is considered to have predeceased the testator under Section
75-2-702.
(g) "Testator" includes the donee of a power of appointment if the power is exercised in the
testator's will.
(2) If a devisee fails to survive the testator and is a grandparent, a descendant of a
grandparent, or a stepchild of either the testator or the donor of a power of appointment exercised
by the testator's will, the following apply:
(a) Except as provided in Subsection (d), if the devise is not in the form of a class gift and
the deceased devisee leaves surviving descendants, a substitute gift is created in the devisee's
surviving descendants. They take per capita at each generation the property to which the devisee
would have been entitled had the devisee survived the testator.
(b) Except as provided in Subsection (d), if the devise is in the form of a class gift, other than
a devise to "issue," "descendants," "heirs of the body," "heirs," "next-of-kin," "relatives," or
"family," or a class described by language of similar import, a substitute gift is created in the
surviving descendant's of any deceased devisee. The property to which the devisees would have
been entitled had all of them survived the testator passes to the surviving devisees and the surviving
descendants of the deceased devisees. Each surviving devisee takes the share to which he would
have been entitled had the deceased devisees survived the testator. Each deceased devisee's
surviving descendants who are substituted for the deceased devisee take per capita at each generation
the share to which the deceased devisee would have been entitled had the deceased devisee survived
the testator. For the purposes of this subsection, "deceased devisee" means a class member who
failed to survive the testator and left one or more surviving descendants.
(c) For the purposes of Section 75-2-601, words of survivorship, such as in a devise to an
individual "if he survives me," or in a devise to "my surviving children," are, in the absence of clear
and convincing evidence, a sufficient indication of an intent contrary to the application of this
section.
(d) If the will creates an alternative devise with respect to a devise for which a substitute gift
is created by Subsection (a) or (b), the substitute gift is superseded by the alternative devise only if
an expressly designated devisee of the alternative devise is entitled to take under the will.
(e) Unless the language creating a power of appointment expressly excludes the substitution
of the descendants of an appointee for the appointee, a surviving descendant of a deceased appointee
of a power of appointment can be substituted for the appointee under this section, whether or not the
descendant is an object of the power.
Section 62. Section 75-2-604 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-604. Failure of testamentary provision.
(1) Except as provided in Section 75-2-603, a devise, other than a residuary devise, that fails
for any reason becomes a part of the residue.
(2) Except as provided in Section 75-2-603, if the residue is devised to two or more persons,
the share of a residuary devisee that fails for any reason passes to the other residuary devisee, or to
other residuary devisees in proportion to the interest of each in the remaining part of the residue.
Section 63. Section 75-2-605 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-605. Increase in securities -- Accessions.
(1) If a testator executes a will that devises securities and the testator then owned securities
that meet the description in the will, the devise includes additional securities owned by the testator
at death to the extent the additional securities were acquired by the testator after the will was
executed as a result of the testator's ownership of the described securities and are securities of any
of the following types:
(a) securities of the same organization acquired by reason of action initiated by the
organization or any successor, related, or acquiring organization, excluding any acquired by exercise
of purchase options;
(b) securities of another organization acquired as a result of a merger, consolidation,
reorganization, or other distribution by the organization or any successor, related, or acquiring
organization; or
(c) securities of the same organization acquired as a result of a plan of reinvestment.
(2) Distributions in cash before death with respect to a described security are not part of the
devise.
Section 64. Section 75-2-606 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-606. Nonademption of specific devises -- Unpaid proceeds of sale, condemnation,
or insurance -- Sale by conservatory or agent.
(1) A specific devisee has a right to the specifically devised property in the testator's estate
at death and:
(a) any balance of the purchase price, together with any security agreement, owing from a
purchaser to the testator at death by reason of sale of the property;
(b) any amount of a condemnation award for the taking of the property unpaid at death;
(c) any proceeds unpaid at death on fire or casualty insurance on or other recovery for injury
to the property;
(d) property owned by the testator at death and acquired as a result of foreclosure, or
obtained in lieu of foreclosure, of the security interest for a specifically devised obligation;
(e) real or tangible personal property owned by the testator at death which the testator
acquired as a replacement for specifically devised real or tangible personal property; and
(f) unless the facts and circumstances indicate that ademption of the devise was intended by
the testator or ademption of the devise is consistent with the testator's manifested plan of
distribution, the value of the specifically devised property to the extent the specifically devised
property is not in the testator's estate at death and its value or its replacement is not covered by
Subsections (a) through (e).
(2) If specifically devised property is sold or mortgaged by a conservator or by an agent
acting within the authority of a durable power of attorney for an incapacitated principal, or if a
condemnation award, insurance proceeds, or recovery for injury to the property are paid to a
conservator or to an agent acting within the authority of a durable power of attorney for an
incapacitated principal, the specific devisee has the right to a general pecuniary devise equal to the
net sale price, the amount of the unpaid loan, the condemnation award, the insurance proceeds, or
the recovery.
(3) The right of a specific devisee under Subsection (2) is reduced by any right the devisee
has under Subsection (1).
(4) For the purposes of the references in Subsection (2) to a conservator, Subsection (2) does
not apply if after the sale, mortgage, condemnation, casualty, or recovery, it was adjudicated that the
testator's incapacity ceased and the testator survived the adjudication by one year.
(5) For the purposes of the references in Subsection (2) to an agent acting within the
authority of a durable power of attorney for an incapacitated principal:
(a) "incapacitated principal" means a principal who is an incapacitated person;
(b) no adjudication of incapacity before death is necessary; and
(c) the acts of an agent within the authority of a durable power of attorney are presumed to
be for an incapacitated principal.
Section 65. Section 75-2-607 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-607. Nonexoneration.
A specific devise passes subject to any mortgage interest existing at the date of death, without
right of exoneration, regardless of a general directive in the will to pay debts.
Section 66. Section 75-2-608 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-608. Exercise of power of appointment.
In the absence of a requirement that a power of appointment be exercised by a reference, or
by an express or specific reference, to the power, a general residuary clause in a will, or a will
making general disposition of all of the testator's property, expresses an intention to exercise a power
of appointment held by the testator only if:
(1) the power is a general power and the creating instrument does not contain a gift if the
power is not exercised; or
(2) the testator's will manifests an intention to include the property subject to the power.
Section 67. Section 75-2-609 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-609. Ademption by satisfaction.
(1) Property a testator gave in his lifetime to a person is treated as a satisfaction of a devise
in whole or in part, only if:
(a) the will provides for deduction of the gift;
(b) the testator declared in a contemporaneous writing that the gift is in satisfaction of the
devise or that its value is to be deducted from the value of the devise; or
(c) the devisee acknowledged in writing that the gift is in satisfaction of the devise or that
its value is to be deducted from the value of the devise.
(2) For purposes of partial satisfaction, property given during lifetime is valued as of the
time the devisee came into possession or enjoyment of the property or at the testator's death,
whichever occurs first.
(3) If the devisee fails to survive the testator, the gift is treated as a full or partial satisfaction
of the devise, as appropriate, in applying Sections 75-2-603 and 75-2-604, unless the testator's
contemporaneous writing provides otherwise.
Section 68. Section 75-2-610 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-610. Marital deduction formulas -- Wills.
For estates of decedents dying after December 31, 1981, where a decedent's will executed
before September 13, 1981, contains a formula expressly providing that the decedent's spouse is to
receive the maximum amount of property qualifying for the marital deduction allowable by federal
law, this formula shall be construed as referring to the unlimited marital deduction allowable by
federal law as amended by U.S.C. Sec. 26, 403(a), Economic Recovery Tax Act of 1981.
Section 69. Section 75-2-611 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-611. Direction to pay taxes in will.
A general direction in a will to pay all taxes imposed as a result of a testator's death or similar
language shall not be construed to include taxes imposed on a "generation skipping transfer" under
Section 2601 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 (or any successor or amended section of similar
content) unless the testator shall express an intention that these taxes be paid out of his estate by
reference to the generation skipping tax or otherwise.
Section 70. Section 75-2-701 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-701. Scope.
In the absence of a finding of a contrary intention, the rules of construction in this part
control the construction of a governing instrument. The rules of construction in this part apply to
a governing instrument of any type, except as the application of a particular section is limited by its
terms to a specific type or types of provision or governing instrument.
Section 71. Section 75-2-702 is enacted to read:
75-2-702. Requirement of survival by 120 hours -- Under probate code or governing
instrument -- Co-owners -- Exceptions -- Protection of payors, third parties, and bona fide
purchasers -- Personal liability of recipient.
(1) Except as provided in Subsection (4), an individual who is not established by clear and
convincing evidence to have survived an event, including the death of another individual, by 120
hours is considered to have predeceased the event.
(2) Except as provided in Subsection (4), for purposes of a provision of a governing
instrument that relates to an individual surviving an event, including the death of another individual,
an individual who is not established by clear and convincing evidence to have survived the event by
120 hours is considered to have predeceased the event.
(3) Except as provided in Subsection (4), if:
(a) it is not established by clear and convincing evidence that one of two co-owners with
right of survivorship survived the other co-owner by 120 hours, 1/2 of the property passes as if one
had survived by 120 hours and 1/2 as if the other had survived by 120 hours; and
(b) there are more than two co-owners and it is not established by clear and convincing
evidence that at least one of them survived the others by 120 hours, the property passes in the
proportion that one bears to the whole number of co-owners. For the purposes of this subsection,
"co-owners with right of survivorship" includes joint tenants, tenants by the entireties, and other
co-owners of property or accounts held under circumstances that entitles one or more to the whole
of the property or account on the death of the other or others.
(4) Survival by 120 hours is not required if:
(a) the governing instrument contains language dealing explicitly with simultaneous deaths
or deaths in a common disaster and that language is operable under the facts of the case;
(b) the governing instrument expressly indicates that an individual is not required to survive
an event, including the death of another individual, by any specified period or expressly requires the
individual to survive the event by a specified period; but survival of the event or the specified period
shall be established by clear and convincing evidence;
(c) the imposition of a 120-hour requirement of survival would cause a nonvested property
interest or a power of appointment to fail to qualify for validity under Subsection 75-2-1203(1)(a),
(2)(a), or (3)(a) or to become invalid under Subsection 75-2-1203(1)(b), (2)(b), or (3)(b); but
survival shall be established by clear and convincing evidence; or
(d) the application of a 120-hour requirement of survival to multiple governing instruments
would result in an unintended failure or duplication of a disposition; but survival shall be
established by clear and convincing evidence.
(5) (a) A payor or other third party is not liable for having made a payment or transferred
an item of property or any other benefit to a beneficiary designated in a governing instrument who,
under this section, is not entitled to the payment or item of property, or for having taken any other
action in good faith reliance on the beneficiary's apparent entitlement under the terms of the
governing instrument, before the payor or other third party received written notice of a claimed lack
of entitlement under this section. A payor or other third party is liable for a payment made or other
action taken after the payor or other third party received written notice of a claimed lack of
entitlement under this section.
(b) Written notice of a claimed lack of entitlement under Subsection (a) shall be mailed to
the payor's or other third party's main office or home by registered or certified mail, return receipt
requested, or served upon the payor or other third party in the same manner as a summons in a civil
action. Upon receipt of written notice of a claimed lack of entitlement under this section, a payor
or other third party may pay any amount owed or transfer or deposit any item of property held by
it to or with the court having jurisdiction of the probate proceedings relating to the decedent's estate,
or if no proceedings have been commenced, to or with the court having jurisdiction of probate
proceedings relating to the decedent's estates located in the county of the decedent's residence. The
court shall hold the funds or item of property and, upon its determination under this section, shall
order disbursement in accordance with the determination. Payments, transfers, or deposits made to
or with the court discharge the payor or other third party from all claims for the value of amounts
paid to or items of property transferred to or deposited with the court.
(6) (a) A person who purchases property for value and without notice, or who receives a
payment or other item of property in partial or full satisfaction of a legally enforceable obligation,
is neither obligated under this section to return the payment, item of property, or benefit nor is liable
under this section for the amount of the payment or the value of the item of property or benefit. But
a person who, not for value, receives a payment, item of property, or any other benefit to which the
person is not entitled under this section is obligated to return the payment, item of property, or
benefit, or is personally liable for the amount of the payment or the value of the item of property or
benefit, to the person who is entitled to it under this section.
(b) If this section or any part of this section is preempted by federal law with respect to a
payment, an item of property, or any other benefit covered by this section, a person who, not for
value, receives the payment, item of property, or any other benefit to which the person is not entitled
under this section is obligated to return the payment, item of property, or benefit, or is personally
liable for the amount of the payment or the value of the item of property or benefit, to the person
who would have been entitled to it were this section or part of this section not preempted.
Section 72. Section 75-2-703 is enacted to read:
75-2-703. Choice of law as to meaning and effect of governing instrument.
The meaning and legal effect of a governing instrument is determined by the local law of the
state selected in the governing instrument, unless the application of that law is contrary to the
provisions relating to the elective share described in Part 2, Elective Share of Surviving Spouse, the
provisions relating to exempt property and allowances described in Part 4, Exempt Property and
Allowances, or any other public policy of this state otherwise applicable to the disposition.
Section 73. Section 75-2-704 is enacted to read:
75-2-704. Power of appointment -- Meaning of specific reference requirement.
If a governing instrument creating a power of appointment expressly requires that the power
be exercised by a reference, an express reference, or a specific reference, to the power or its source,
it is presumed that the donor's intention, in requiring that the donee exercise the power by making
reference to the particular power or to the creating instrument, was to prevent an inadvertent exercise
of the power.
Section 74. Section 75-2-705 is enacted to read:
75-2-705. Class gifts construed to accord with intestate succession.
(1) Adopted individuals and individuals born out of wedlock, and their respective
descendants if appropriate to the class, are included in class gifts and other terms of relationship in
accordance with the rules for intestate succession. Terms of relationship that do not differentiate
relationships by blood from those by affinity, such as "uncles," "aunts," "nieces," or "nephews", are
construed to exclude relatives by affinity. Terms of relationship that do not differentiate
relationships by the half blood from those by the whole blood, such as "brothers," "sisters," "nieces,"
or "nephews", are construed to include both types of relationships.
(2) In addition to the requirements of Subsection (1), in construing a dispositive provision
of a transferor who is not the natural parent, an individual born to the natural parent is not considered
the child of that parent unless the individual lived while a minor as a regular member of the
household of that natural parent or of that parent's parent, brother, sister, spouse, or surviving spouse.
(3) In addition to the requirements of Subsection (1), in construing a dispositive provision
of a transferor who is not the adopting parent, an adopted individual is not considered the child of
the adopting parent unless the adopted individual lived while a minor, either before or after the
adoption, as a regular member of the household of the adopting parent.
Section 75. Section 75-2-706 is enacted to read:
75-2-706. Definitions -- Life insurance -- Retirement plan -- Account with POD
designation -- Transfer-on-death registration -- Deceased beneficiary -- Substitute gift --
Protection of payors and bona fide purchasers -- Personal liability of recipient.
(1) As used in this section:
(a) "Alternative beneficiary designation" means a beneficiary designation that is expressly
created by the governing instrument and, under the terms of the governing instrument, can take effect
instead of another beneficiary designation on the happening of one or more events, including
survival of the decedent or failure to survive the decedent, whether an event is expressed in
condition-precedent, condition-subsequent, or any other form.
(b) "Beneficiary" means the beneficiary of a beneficiary designation under which the
beneficiary shall survive the decedent and includes:
(i) a class member if the beneficiary designation is in the form of a class gift; and
(ii) an individual or class member who was deceased at the time the beneficiary designation
was executed as well as an individual or class member who was then living but who failed to survive
the decedent, but excludes a joint tenant of a joint tenancy with the right of survivorship and a party
to a joint and survivorship account.
(c) "Beneficiary designation" includes an alternative beneficiary designation and a
beneficiary designation in the form of a class gift.
(d) "Class member" includes an individual who fails to survive the decedent but who would
have taken under a beneficiary designation in the form of a class gift had he survived the decedent.
(e) "Stepchild" means a child of the decedent's surviving, deceased, or former spouse, and
not of the decedent.
(f) "Surviving beneficiary" or "surviving descendant" means a beneficiary or a descendant
who neither predeceased the decedent nor is considered to have predeceased the decedent under
Section 75-2-702.
(2) If a beneficiary fails to survive the decedent and is a grandparent, a descendant of a
grandparent, or a stepchild of the decedent, the following apply:
(a) Except as provided in Subsection (2)(d), if the beneficiary designation is not in the form
of a class gift and the deceased beneficiary leaves surviving descendants, a substitute gift is created
in the beneficiary's surviving descendants. They take per capita at each generation the property to
which the beneficiary would have been entitled had the beneficiary survived the decedent.
(b) Except as provided in Subsection (2)(d), if the beneficiary designation is in the form of
a class gift, other than a beneficiary designation to "issue," "descendants," "heirs of the body,"
"heirs," "next-of-kin," "relatives," or "family," or a class described by language of similar import,
a substitute gift is created in the surviving descendants of any deceased beneficiary. The property
to which the beneficiaries would have been entitled had all of them survived the decedent passes to
the surviving beneficiaries and the surviving descendants of the deceased beneficiaries. Each
surviving beneficiary takes the share to which he would have been entitled had the deceased
beneficiaries survived the decedent. Each deceased beneficiary's surviving descendants who are
substituted for the deceased beneficiary take per capita at each generation the share to which the
deceased beneficiary would have been entitled had the deceased beneficiary survived the decedent.
For the purposes of this paragraph, "deceased beneficiary" means a class member who failed to
survive the decedent and left one or more surviving descendants.
(c) For the purposes of Section 75-2-701, words of survivorship, such as in a beneficiary
designation to an individual "if he survives me," or in a beneficiary designation to "my surviving
children," are, in the absence of clear and convincing evidence, a sufficient indication of an intent
contrary to the application of this section.
(d) If a governing instrument creates an alternative beneficiary designation with respect to
a beneficiary designation for which a substitute gift is created by Subsection (2)(a) or (b), the
substitute gift is superseded by the alternative beneficiary designation only if an expressly designated
beneficiary of the alternative beneficiary designation is entitled to take.
(3) (a) A payor is protected from liability in making payments under the terms of the
beneficiary designation until the payor has received written notice of a claim to a substitute gift
under this section. Payment made before the receipt of written notice of a claim to a substitute gift
under this section discharges the payor, but not the recipient, from all claims for the amounts paid.
A payor is liable for a payment made after the payor has received written notice of the claim. A
recipient is liable for a payment received, whether or not written notice of the claim is given.
(b) The written notice of the claim shall be mailed to the payor's main office or home by
registered or certified mail, return receipt requested, or served upon the payor in the same manner
as a summons in a civil action. Upon receipt of written notice of the claim, a payor may pay any
amount owed by it to the court having jurisdiction of the probate proceedings relating to the
decedent's estate or, if no proceedings have been commenced, to the court having jurisdiction of
probate proceedings relating to the decedent's estates located in the county of the decedent's
residence. The court shall hold the funds and, upon its determination under this section, shall order
disbursement in accordance with the determination. Payment made to the court discharges the payor
from all claims for the amounts paid.
(4) (a) A person who purchases property for value and without notice, or who receives a
payment or other item of property in partial or full satisfaction of a legally enforceable obligation,
is neither obligated under this section to return the payment, item of property, or benefit nor is liable
under this section for the amount of the payment or the value of the item of property or benefit. But
a person who, not for value, receives a payment, item of property, or any other benefit to which the
person is not entitled under this section is obligated to return the payment, item of property, or
benefit, or is personally liable for the amount of the payment or the value of the item of property or
benefit, to the person who is entitled to it under this section.
(b) If this section or any part of this section is preempted by federal law with respect to a
payment, an item of property, or any other benefit covered by this section, a person who, not for
value, receives the payment, item of property, or any other benefit to which the person is not entitled
under this section is obligated to return the payment, item of property, or benefit, or is personally
liable for the amount of the payment or the value of the item of property or benefit, to the person
who would have been entitled to it were this section or part of this section not preempted.
Section 76. Section 75-2-707 is enacted to read:
75-2-707. Definitions -- Survivorship with respect to future interests under terms of
trust -- Substitute takers.
(1) As used in this section:
(a) "Alternative future interest" means an expressly created future interest that can take effect
in possession or enjoyment instead of another future interest on the happening of one or more events,
including survival of an event or failure to survive an event, whether an event is expressed in
condition-precedent, condition-subsequent, or any other form. A residuary clause in a will does not
create an alternative future interest with respect to a future interest created in a nonresiduary devise
in the will, whether or not the will specifically provides that lapsed or failed devises are to pass under
the residuary clause.
(b) "Beneficiary" means the beneficiary of a future interest and includes a class member if
the future interest is in the form of a class gift.
(c) "Class member" includes an individual who fails to survive the distribution date but who
would have taken under a future interest in the form of a class gift had he survived the distribution
date.
(d) "Distribution date" with respect to a future interest, means the time when the future
interest is to take effect in possession or enjoyment. The distribution date need not occur at the
beginning or end of a calendar day, but can occur at a time during the course of a day.
(e) "Future interest" includes an alternative future interest and a future interest in the form
of a class gift.
(f) "Future interest under the terms of a trust" means a future interest that was created by a
transfer creating a trust or to an existing trust or by an exercise of a power of appointment to an
existing trust, directing the continuance of an existing trust, designating a beneficiary of an existing
trust, or creating a trust.
(g) "Surviving beneficiary" or "surviving descendant" means a beneficiary or a descendant
who neither predeceased the distribution date nor is considered to have predeceased the distribution
date under Section 75-2-702.
(2) A future interest under the terms of a trust is contingent on the beneficiary's surviving
the distribution date. If a beneficiary of a future interest under the terms of a trust fails to survive
the distribution date, the following apply:
(a) Except as provided in Subsection (2)(d), if the future interest is not in the form of a class
gift and the deceased beneficiary leaves surviving descendants, a substitute gift is created in the
beneficiary's surviving descendants. They take per capita at each generation the property to which
the beneficiary would have been entitled had the beneficiary survived the distribution date.
(b) Except as provided in Subsection (2)(d), if the future interest is in the form of a class gift,
other than a future interest to "issue," "descendants," "heirs of the body," "heirs," "next-of-kin,"
"relatives," or "family," or a class described by language of similar import, a substitute gift is created
in the surviving descendants of any deceased beneficiary. The property to which the beneficiaries
would have been entitled had all of them survived the distribution date passes to the surviving
beneficiaries and the surviving descendants of the deceased beneficiaries. Each surviving
beneficiary takes the share to which he would have been entitled had the deceased beneficiaries
survived the distribution date. Each deceased beneficiary's surviving descendants who are
substituted for the deceased beneficiary take per capita at each generation the share to which the
deceased beneficiary would have been entitled had the deceased beneficiary survived the distribution
date. For the purposes of this subsection, "deceased beneficiary" means a class member who failed
to survive the distribution date and left one or more surviving descendants.
(c) For the purposes of Section 75-2-701, words of survivorship attached to a future interest
are, in the absence of clear and convincing evidence, a sufficient indication of an intent contrary to
the application of this section. Words of survivorship include words of survivorship that relate to
the distribution date or to an earlier or an unspecified time, whether those words of survivorship are
expressed in condition-precedent, condition-subsequent, or any other form.
(d) If a governing instrument creates an alternative future interest with respect to a future
interest for which a substitute gift is created by Subsection (2)(a) or (b), the substitute gift is
superseded by the alternative future interest only if an expressly designated beneficiary of the
alternative future interest is entitled to take in possession or enjoyment.
(3) If, after the application of this section, there is no surviving taker, the property passes in
the following order:
(a) if the trust was created in a nonresiduary devise in the transferor's will or in a codicil to
the transferor's will, the property passes under the residuary clause in the transferor's will; for
purposes of this section, the residuary clause is treated as creating a future interest under the terms
of a trust; and
(b) if no taker is produced by the application of Subsection (3)(a), the property passes to the
transferor's heirs under Section 75-2-711.
Section 77. Section 75-2-708 is enacted to read:
75-2-708. Class gifts to "descendants," "issue," or "heirs of the body" -- Form of
distribution if none specified.
If a class gift in favor of "descendants," "issue," or "heirs of the body" does not specify the
manner in which the property is to be distributed among the class members, the property is
distributed among the class members who are living when the interest is to take effect in possession
or enjoyment, in such shares as they would receive, under the applicable law of intestate succession,
if the designated ancestor had then died intestate owning the subject matter of the class gift.
Section 78. Section 75-2-709 is enacted to read:
75-2-709. Definitions -- Representation -- Per capita at each generation -- Per stirpes.
(1) As used in this section:
(a) "Deceased child" or "deceased descendant" means a child or a descendant who either
predeceased the distribution date or is considered to have predeceased the distribution date under
Section 75-2-702.
(b) "Distribution date," with respect to an interest, means the time when the interest is to take
effect in possession or enjoyment. The distribution date need not occur at the beginning or end of
a calendar day, but can occur at a time during the course of a day.
(c) "Surviving ancestor," "surviving child," or "surviving descendant" means an ancestor,
a child, or a descendant who neither predeceased the distribution date nor is considered to have
predeceased the distribution date under Section 75-2-702.
(2) If an applicable statute or a governing instrument calls for property to be distributed or
taken "per capita at each generation," the property is divided into as many equal shares as there are:
(a) surviving descendants in the generation nearest to the designated ancestor which contains
one or more surviving descendants; and
(b) deceased descendants in the same generation who left surviving descendants, if any.
Each surviving descendant in the nearest generation is allocated one share. The remaining shares,
if any, are combined and then divided in the same manner among the surviving descendants of the
deceased descendants as if the surviving descendants who were allocated a share and their surviving
descendants had predeceased the distribution date.
(3) If a governing instrument calls for property to be distributed or taken "per stirpes," "by
representation," or "by right of representation," the property is divided into as many equal shares as
there are:
(a) surviving children of the designated ancestor; and
(b) deceased children who left surviving descendants. Each surviving child, if any, is
allocated one share. The share of each deceased child with surviving descendants is divided in the
same manner, with subdivision repeating at each succeeding generation until the property is fully
allocated among surviving descendants.
(4) For the purposes of Subsections (2) and (3), an individual who is deceased and left no
surviving descendant is disregarded, and an individual who leaves a surviving ancestor who is a
descendant of the designated ancestor is not entitled to a share.
Section 79. Section 75-2-710 is enacted to read:
75-2-710. Worthier-title doctrine abolished.
The doctrine of worthier title is abolished as a rule of law and as a rule of construction.
Language in a governing instrument describing the beneficiaries of a disposition as the transferor's
"heirs," "heirs-at-law," "next-of-kin," "distributees," "relatives," or "family," or language of similar
import, does not create or presumptively create a reversionary interest in the transferor.
Section 80. Section 75-2-711 is enacted to read:
75-2-711. Interests in "heirs" and like.
If an applicable statute or a governing instrument calls for a present or future distribution to
or creates a present or future interest in a designated individual's "heirs," "heirs-at-law,"
"next-of-kin," "relatives," or "family," or language of similar import, the property passes to those
persons, including the state, and in such shares as would succeed to the designated individual's
intestate estate under the intestate succession law of the designated individual's domicile if the
designated individual died when the disposition is to take effect in possession or enjoyment. If the
designated individual's surviving spouse is living but is remarried at the time the disposition is to
take effect in possession or enjoyment, the surviving spouse is not an heir of the designated
individual.
Section 81. Section 75-2-801 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-801. Disclaimer of property interests -- Time -- Form -- Effect -- Waiver and bar
-- Remedy not exclusive -- Application.
(1) A person, or the representative of a person, to whom an interest in or with respect to
property or an interest therein devolves by whatever means may disclaim it in whole or in part by
delivering or filing a written disclaimer under this section. The right to disclaim exists
notwithstanding:
(a) any limitation on the interest of the disclaimant in the nature of a spendthrift provision
or similar restriction; or
(b) any restriction or limitation on the right to disclaim contained in the governing
instrument. For purposes of this subsection, the "representative of a person" includes a personal
representative of a decedent, a conservator of a disabled person, a guardian of a minor or
incapacitated person, and an agent acting on behalf of the person within the authority of a power of
attorney.
(2) The following rules govern the time when a disclaimer shall be filed or delivered:
(a) If the property or interest has devolved to the disclaimant under a testamentary
instrument or by the laws of intestacy, the disclaimer shall be filed, if of a present interest, not later
than nine months after the death of the deceased owner or deceased donee of a power of appointment
and, if of a future interest, not later than nine months after the event determining that the taker of the
property or interest is finally ascertained and his interest is indefeasibly vested. The disclaimer shall
be filed in the district court of the county in which proceedings for the administration of the estate
of the deceased owner or deceased donee of the power have been commenced. A copy of the
disclaimer shall be delivered in person or mailed by registered or certified mail, return receipt
requested, to any personal representative or other fiduciary of the decedent or donee of the power.
(b) If a property or interest has devolved to the disclaimant under a nontestamentary
instrument or contract, the disclaimer shall be delivered or filed, if of a present interest, not later than
nine months after the effective date of the nontestamentary instrument or contract and, if of a future
interest, not later than nine months after the event determining that the taker of the property or
interest is finally ascertained and his interest is indefeasibly vested. If the person entitled to disclaim
does not know of the existence of the interest, the disclaimer shall be delivered or filed not later than
nine months after the person learns of the existence of the interest. The effective date of a revocable
instrument or contract is the date on which the maker no longer has power to revoke it or to transfer
to himself or another the entire legal and equitable ownership of the interest. The disclaimer or a
copy thereof shall be delivered in person or mailed by registered or certified mail, return receipt
requested, to the person who has legal title to or possession of the interest disclaimed.
(c) A surviving joint tenant or tenant by the entireties may disclaim as a separate interest any
property or interest therein devolving to him by right of survivorship. A surviving joint tenant or
tenant by the entireties may disclaim the entire interest in any property or interest therein that is the
subject of a joint tenancy or tenancy by the entireties devolving to him, if the joint tenancy or
tenancy by the entireties was created by act of a deceased joint tenant or tenant by the entireties, the
survivor did not join in creating the joint tenancy or tenancy by the entireties, and has not accepted
a benefit under it.
(d) If real property or an interest therein is disclaimed, a copy of the disclaimer may be
recorded in the office of the county recorder of the county in which the property or interest
disclaimed is located.
(3) The disclaimer shall:
(a) describe the property or interest disclaimed;
(b) declare the disclaimer and extent thereof; and
(c) be signed by the disclaimant.
(4) The effects of a disclaimer are:
(a) If property or an interest therein devolves to a disclaimant under a testamentary
instrument, under a power of appointment exercised by a testamentary instrument, or under the laws
of intestacy, and the decedent has not provided for another disposition of that interest, should it be
disclaimed, or of disclaimed, or failed interests in general, the disclaimed interest devolves as if the
disclaimant had predeceased the decedent, but if by law or under the testamentary instrument the
descendants of the disclaimant would share in the disclaimed interest per capita at each generation
or otherwise were the disclaimant to predecease the decedent, then the disclaimed interest passes per
capita at each generation, or passes as directed by the governing instrument, to the descendants of
the disclaimant who survive the decedent. A future interest that takes effect in possession or
enjoyment after the termination of the estate or interest disclaimed takes effect as if the disclaimant
had predeceased the decedent. A disclaimer relates back for all purposes to the date of death of the
decedent.
(b) If property or an interest therein devolves to a disclaimant under a nontestamentary
instrument or contract and the instrument or contract does not provide for another disposition of that
interest, should it be disclaimed, or of disclaimed or failed interests in general, the disclaimed
interest devolves as if the disclaimant has predeceased the effective date of the instrument or
contract, but if by law or under the nontestamentary instrument or contract the descendants of the
disclaimant would share in the disclaimed interest per capita at each generation or otherwise were
the disclaimant to predecease the effective date of the instrument, then the disclaimed interest passes
per capita at each generation, or passes as directed by the governing instrument, to the descendants
of the disclaimant who survive the effective date of the instrument. A disclaimer relates back for
all purposes to that date. A future interest that takes effect in possession or enjoyment at or after the
termination of the disclaimed interest takes effect as if the disclaimant had died before the effective
date of the instrument or contract that transferred the disclaimed interest.
(c) The disclaimer or the written waiver of the right to disclaim is binding upon the
disclaimant or person waiving and all persons claiming through or under either of them.
(5) The right to disclaim property or an interest therein is barred by:
(a) an assignment, conveyance, encumbrance, pledge, or transfer of the property or interest,
or a contract therefor;
(b) a written waiver of the right to disclaim;
(c) an acceptance of the property or interest or a benefit under it; or
(d) a sale of the property or interest under judicial sale made before the disclaimer is made.
(6) This section does not abridge the right of a person to waive, release, disclaim, or
renounce property or an interest therein under any other statute.
(7) An interest in property that exists on July 1, 1998, as to which, if a present interest, the
time for filing a disclaimer under this section has not expired or, if a future interest, the interest has
not become indefeasibly vested or the taker finally ascertained, may be disclaimed within nine
months after July 1, 1998.
Section 82. Section 75-2-802 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-802. Effect of divorce, annulment, and decree of separation.
(1) An individual who is divorced from the decedent or whose marriage to the decedent has
been annulled is not a surviving spouse unless, by virtue of a subsequent marriage, the individual
is married to the decedent at the time of death. A decree of separation that does not terminate the
status of husband and wife is not a divorce for purposes of this section.
(2) For purposes of Parts 1, 2, 3, and 4 and Section 75-3-203, a surviving spouse does not
include:
(a) an individual who obtains or consents to a final decree or judgment of divorce from the
decedent or an annulment of their marriage, which decree or judgment is not recognized as valid in
this state, unless subsequently they participate in a marriage ceremony purporting to marry each to
the other or live together as husband and wife;
(b) an individual who, following an invalid decree or judgment of divorce or annulment
obtained by the decedent, participates in a marriage ceremony with a third individual; or
(c) an individual who was a party to a valid proceeding concluded by an order purporting
to terminate all marital property rights.
Section 83. Section 75-2-803 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-803. Definitions -- Effect of homicide on intestate succession, wills, trusts, joint
assets, life insurance, and beneficiary designations -- Forfeiture -- Revocation.
(1) As used in this section:
(a) "Disposition or appointment of property" includes a transfer of an item of property or any
other benefit to a beneficiary designated in a governing instrument.
(b) "Governing instrument" means a governing instrument executed by the decedent.
(c) "Revocable," with respect to a disposition, appointment, provision, or nomination, means
one under which the decedent, at the time of or immediately before death, was alone empowered,
by law or under the governing instrument, to cancel the designation, in favor of the killer, whether
or not the decedent was then empowered to designate himself in place of his killer and whether or
not the decedent then had capacity to exercise the power.
(2) An individual who feloniously and intentionally kills the decedent forfeits all benefits
under this chapter with respect to the decedent's estate, including an intestate share, an elective share,
an omitted spouse's or child's share, a homestead allowance, exempt property, and a family
allowance. If the decedent died intestate, the decedent's intestate estate passes as if the killer
disclaimed his intestate share.
(3) The felonious and intentional killing of the decedent:
(a) revokes any revocable:
(i) disposition or appointment of property made by the decedent to the killer in a governing
instrument;
(ii) provision in a governing instrument conferring a general or nongeneral power of
appointment on the killer; and
(iii) nomination of the killer in a governing instrument, nominating or appointing the killer
to serve in any fiduciary or representative capacity, including a personal representative, executor,
trustee, or agent; and
(b) severs the interests of the decedent and killer in property held by them at the time of the
killing as joint tenants with the right of survivorship, transforming the interests of the decedent and
killer into tenancies in common.
(4) A severance under Subsection (3)(b) does not affect any third-party interest in property
acquired for value and in good faith reliance on an apparent title by survivorship in the killer unless
a writing declaring the severance has been noted, registered, filed, or recorded in records appropriate
to the kind and location of the property which are relied upon, in the ordinary course of transactions
involving such property, as evidence of ownership.
(5) Provisions of a governing instrument are given effect as if the killer disclaimed all
provisions revoked by this section or, in the case of a revoked nomination in a fiduciary or
representative capacity, as if the killer predeceased the decedent.
(6) A wrongful acquisition of property or interest by a killer not covered by this section shall
be treated in accordance with the principle that a killer cannot profit from his wrong.
(7) After all right to appeal has been exhausted, a judgment of conviction establishing
criminal accountability for the felonious and intentional killing of the decedent conclusively
establishes the convicted individual as the decedent's killer for purposes of this section. In the
absence of a conviction, the court, upon the petition of an interested person, shall determine whether,
under the preponderance of evidence standard, the individual would be found criminally accountable
for the felonious and intentional killing of the decedent. If the court determines that, under that
standard, the individual would be found criminally accountable for the felonious and intentional
killing of the decedent, the determination conclusively establishes that individual as the decedent's
killer for purposes of this section.
(8) (a) A payor or other third party is not liable for having made a payment or transferred
an item of property or any other benefit to a beneficiary designated in a governing instrument
affected by an intentional and felonious killing, or for having taken any other action in good faith
reliance on the validity of the governing instrument, upon request and satisfactory proof of the
decedent's death, before the payor or other third party received written notice of a claimed forfeiture
or revocation under this section. A payor or other third party is liable for a payment made or other
action taken after the payor or other third party received written notice of a claimed forfeiture or
revocation under this section.
(b) Written notice of a claimed forfeiture or revocation under Subsection (8)(a) shall be
mailed to the payor's or other third party's main office or home by registered or certified mail, return
receipt requested, or served upon the payor or other third party in the same manner as a summons
in a civil action. Upon receipt of written notice of a claimed forfeiture or revocation under this
section, a payor or other third party may pay any amount owed or transfer or deposit any item of
property held by it to or with the court having jurisdiction of the probate proceedings relating to the
decedent's estate, or if no proceedings have been commenced, to or with the court having jurisdiction
of probate proceedings relating to the decedent's estates located in the county of the decedent's
residence. The court shall hold the funds or item of property and, upon its determination under this
section, shall order disbursement in accordance with the determination. Payments, transfers, or
deposits made to or with the court discharge the payor or other third party from all claims for the
value of amounts paid to or items of property transferred to or deposited with the court.
(9) (a) A person who purchases property for value and without notice, or who receives a
payment or other item of property in partial or full satisfaction of a legally enforceable obligation,
is neither obligated under this section to return the payment, item of property, or benefit nor is liable
under this section for the amount of the payment or the value of the item of property or benefit. But
a person who, not for value, receives a payment, item of property, or any other benefit to which the
person is not entitled under this section is obligated to return the payment, item of property, or
benefit, or is personally liable for the amount of the payment or the value of the item of property or
benefit, to the person who is entitled to it under this section.
(b) If this section or any part of this section is preempted by federal law with respect to a
payment, an item of property, or any other benefit covered by this section, a person who, not for
value, receives the payment, item of property, or any other benefit to which the person is not entitled
under this section is obligated to return the payment, item of property, or benefit, or is personally
liable for the amount of the payment or the value of the item of property or benefit, to the person
who would have been entitled to it were this section or part of this section not preempted.
Section 84. Section 75-2-804 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-804. Definitions -- Revocation of probate and nonprobate transfers by divorce --
Effect of severance -- Revival -- Protection of payors, third parties, and bona fide purchasers
-- Personal liability of recipient -- No revocation by other changes of circumstances.
(1) As used in this section:
(a) "Disposition or appointment of property" includes a transfer of an item of property or any
other benefit to a beneficiary designated in a governing instrument.
(b) "Divorce or annulment" means any divorce or annulment, or any dissolution or
declaration of invalidity of a marriage, that would exclude the spouse as a surviving spouse within
the meaning of Section 75-2-802. A decree of separation that does not terminate the status of
husband and wife is not a divorce for purposes of this section.
(c) "Divorced individual" includes an individual whose marriage has been annulled.
(d) "Governing instrument" means a governing instrument executed by the divorced
individual before the divorce or annulment of his marriage to his former spouse.
(e) "Relative of the divorced individual's former spouse" means an individual who is related
to the divorced individual's former spouse by blood, adoption, or affinity and who, after the divorce
or annulment, is not related to the divorced individual by blood, adoption, or affinity.
(f) "Revocable," with respect to a disposition, appointment, provision, or nomination, means
one under which the divorced individual, at the time of the divorce or annulment, was alone
empowered, by law or under the governing instrument, to cancel the designation in favor of his
former spouse or former spouse's relative, whether or not the divorced individual was then
empowered to designate himself in place of his former spouse or in place of his former spouse's
relative and whether or not the divorced individual then had the capacity to exercise the power.
(2) Except as provided by the express terms of a governing instrument, a court order, or a
contract relating to the division of the marital estate made between the divorced individuals before
or after the marriage, divorce, or annulment, the divorce or annulment of a marriage:
(a) revokes any revocable:
(i) disposition or appointment of property made by a divorced individual to his former
spouse in a governing instrument and any disposition or appointment created by law or in a
governing instrument to a relative of the divorced individual's former spouse;
(ii) provision in a governing instrument conferring a general or nongeneral power of
appointment on the divorced individual's former spouse or on a relative of the divorced individual's
former spouse; and
(iii) nomination in a governing instrument, nominating a divorced individual's former spouse
or a relative of the divorced individual's former spouse to serve in any fiduciary or representative
capacity, including a personal representative, executor, trustee, conservator, agent, or guardian; and
(b) severs the interests of the former spouses in property held by them at the time of the
divorce or annulment as joint tenants with the right of survivorship, transforming the interests of the
former spouses into tenancies in common.
(3) A severance under Subsection (2)(b) does not affect any third-party interest in property
acquired for value and in good faith reliance on an apparent title by survivorship in the survivor of
the former spouses unless a writing declaring the severance has been noted, registered, filed, or
recorded in records appropriate to the kind and location of the property which are relied upon, in the
ordinary course of transactions involving such property, as evidence of ownership.
(4) Provisions of a governing instrument are given effect as if the former spouse and
relatives of the former spouse disclaimed all provisions revoked by this section or, in the case of a
revoked nomination in a fiduciary or representative capacity, as if the former spouse and relatives
of the former spouse died immediately before the divorce or annulment.
(5) Provisions revoked solely by this section are revived by the divorced individual's
remarriage to the former spouse or by a nullification of the divorce or annulment.
(6) No change of circumstances other than as described in this section and in Section
75-2-803 effects a revocation.
(7) (a) A payor or other third party is not liable for having made a payment or transferred
an item of property or any other benefit to a beneficiary designated in a governing instrument
affected by a divorce, annulment, or remarriage, or for having taken any other action in good faith
reliance on the validity of the governing instrument, before the payor or other third party received
written notice of the divorce, annulment, or remarriage. A payor or other third party is liable for a
payment made or other action taken after the payor or other third party received written notice of a
claimed forfeiture or revocation under this section.
(b) Written notice of the divorce, annulment, or remarriage under Subsection (7)(a) shall be
mailed to the payor's or other third party's main office or home by registered or certified mail, return
receipt requested, or served upon the payor or other third party in the same manner as a summons
in a civil action. Upon receipt of written notice of the divorce, annulment, or remarriage, a payor
or other third party may pay any amount owed or transfer or deposit any item of property held by
it to or with the court having jurisdiction of the probate proceedings relating to the decedent's estate
or, if no proceedings have been commenced, to or with the court having jurisdiction of probate
proceedings relating to the decedent's estates located in the county of the decedent's residence. The
court shall hold the funds or item of property and, upon its determination under this section, shall
order disbursement or transfer in accordance with the determination. Payments, transfers, or
deposits made to or with the court discharge the payor or other third party from all claims for the
value of amounts paid to or items of property transferred to or deposited with the court.
(8) (a) A person who purchases property from a former spouse, relative of a former spouse,
or any other person for value and without notice, or who receives from a former spouse, relative of
a former spouse, or any other person a payment or other item of property in partial or full satisfaction
of a legally enforceable obligation, is neither obligated under this section to return the payment, item
of property, or benefit nor is liable under this section for the amount of the payment or the value of
the item of property or benefit. But a former spouse, relative of a former spouse, or other person
who, not for value, received a payment, item of property, or any other benefit to which that person
is not entitled under this section is obligated to return the payment, item of property, or benefit, or
is personally liable for the amount of the payment or the value of the item of property or benefit, to
the person who is entitled to it under this section.
(b) If this section or any part of this section is preempted by federal law with respect to a
payment, an item of property, or any other benefit covered by this section, a former spouse, relative
of the former spouse, or any other person who, not for value, received a payment, item of property,
or any other benefit to which that person is not entitled under this section is obligated to return that
payment, item of property, or benefit, or is personally liable for the amount of the payment or the
value of the item of property or benefit, to the person who would have been entitled to it were this
section or part of this section not preempted.
Section 85. Section 75-2-901 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-901. Deposit of will with court in testator's lifetime.
A will may be deposited by the testator or the testator's agent with any court for safekeeping,
under rules of the court. The will shall be sealed and kept confidential. During the testator's
lifetime, a deposited will shall be delivered only to the testator or to a person authorized in writing
signed by the testator to receive the will. A conservator may be allowed to examine a deposited will
of a protected testator under procedures designed to maintain the confidential character of the
document to the extent possible, and to ensure that it will be resealed and kept on deposit after the
examination. Upon being informed of the testator's death, the court shall notify any person
designated to receive the will and deliver it to that person on request; or the court may deliver the
will to the appropriate court.
Section 86. Section 75-2-902 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-902. Duty of custodian of will -- Liability.
After the death of a testator and on request of an interested person, a person having custody
of a will of the testator shall deliver it with reasonable promptness to a person able to secure its
probate or to an appropriate court. A person who wilfully fails to deliver a will is liable to any
person aggrieved for any damages that may be sustained by the failure. A person who wilfully
refuses or fails to deliver a will after being ordered by the court in a proceeding brought for the
purpose of compelling delivery is subject to penalty for contempt of court.
Section 87. Section 75-2-1001 is repealed and reenacted to read:
75-2-1001. Honorary trusts -- Trusts for pets.
(1) Subject to Subsection (3), if a trust is for a specific lawful noncharitable purpose or for
a lawful noncharitable purpose to be selected by the trustee and there is no definite or definitely
ascertainable beneficiary designated, the trust may be performed by the trustee for 21 years but no
longer whether or not the terms of the trust contemplate a longer duration.
(2) Subject to this subsection and Subsection (3), a trust for the care of a designated domestic
or pet animal is valid. The trust terminates when no living animal is covered by the trust. A
governing instrument shall be liberally construed to bring the transfer within this subsection, to
presume against the merely precatory or honorary nature of the disposition, and to carry out the
general intent of the transferor. Extrinsic evidence is admissible in determining the transferor's
intent.
(3) In addition to the provisions of Subsection (a) or (b), a trust covered by either of those
subsections is subject to the following provisions:
(a) Except as expressly provided otherwise in the trust instrument, no portion of the principle
or income may be converted to the use of the trustee or to any use other than for the trust's purposes
or for the benefit of a covered animal.
(b) Upon termination, the trustee shall transfer the unexpended trust property in the
following order:
(i) as directed in the trust instrument;
(ii) if the trust was created in a nonresiduary clause in the transferor's will or in a codicil to
the transferor's will, under the residuary clause in the transferor's will; and
(iii) if no taker is produced by the application of Subsection (i) or (ii), to the transferor's heirs
under Section 75-2-711.
(c) For the purposes of Section 75-2-707, the residuary clause is treated as creating a future
interest under the terms of a trust.
(d) The intended use of the principal or income can be enforced by an individual designated
for that purpose in the trust instrument or, if none, by an individual appointed by a court upon
application to it by an individual.
(e) Except as ordered by the court or required by the trust instrument, no filing, report,
registration, periodic accounting, separate maintenance of funds, appointment, or fee is required by
reason of the existence of the fiduciary relationship of the trustee.
(f) A court may reduce the amount of the property transferred, if it determines that that
amount substantially exceeds the amount required for the intended use. The amount of the reduction,
if any, passes as unexpended trust property under Subsection (b).
(g) If no trustee is designated or no designated trustee is willing or able to serve, a court shall
name a trustee. A court may order the transfer of the property to another trustee, if required to assure
that the intended use is carried out and if no successor trustee is designated in the trust instrument
or if no designated successor trustee agrees to serve or is able to serve. A court may also make such
other orders and determinations as shall be advisable to carry out the intent of the transferor and the
purpose of this section.
Section 88. Section 75-2-1201 is enacted to read:
75-2-1201. Uniform Statutory Rule Against Perpetuities.
This part is known as the "Uniform Statutory Rule Against Perpetuities."
Section 89. Section 75-2-1202 is enacted to read:
75-2-1202. Uniformity of application and construction.
This part shall be applied and construed to effectuate its general purpose to make uniform
the law with respect to the subject of this section among states enacting it.
Section 90. Section 75-2-1203 is enacted to read:
75-2-1203. Validity of nonvested property interest -- Validity of general power of
appointment subject to a condition precedent -- Validity of nongeneral or testamentary power
of appointment -- Possibility of postdeath child disregarded -- Effect of certain "later-of" type
language.
(1) A nonvested property interest is invalid unless:
(a) when the interest is created, it is certain to vest or terminate no later than 21 years after
the death of an individual then alive; or
(b) the interest either vests or terminates within 90 years after its creation.
(2) A general power of appointment not presently exercisable because of a condition
precedent is invalid unless:
(a) when the power is created, the condition precedent is certain to be satisfied or becomes
impossible to satisfy no later than 21 years after the death of an individual then alive; or
(b) the condition precedent either is satisfied or becomes impossible to satisfy within 90
years after its creation.
(3) A nongeneral power of appointment or a general testamentary power of appointment is
invalid unless:
(a) when the power is created, it is certain to be irrevocably exercised or otherwise to
terminate no later than 21 years after the death of an individual then alive; or
(b) the power is irrevocably exercised or otherwise terminates within 90 years after its
creation.
(4) In determining whether a nonvested property interest or a power of appointment is valid
under Subsection (1)(a), (2)(a), or (3)(a), the possibility that a child will be born to an individual
after the individual's death is disregarded.
(5) The language in a governing instrument is inoperative to the extent it produces a period
of time that exceeds 21 years after the death of the survivor of the specified lives, if, in measuring
a period from the creation of a trust or other property arrangement, the language:
(a) seeks to disallow the vesting or termination of any interest or trust beyond;
(b) seeks to postpone the vesting or termination of any interest or trust until; or
(c) seeks to operate in effect in any similar fashion upon, the later of:
(i) the expiration of a period of time not exceeding 21 years after the death of the survivor
of specified lives in being at the creation of the trust or other property arrangement; or
(ii) the expiration of a period of time that exceeds or might exceed 21 years after the death
of the survivor of lives in being at the creation of the trust or other property arrangement.
Section 91. Section 75-2-1204 is enacted to read:
75-2-1204. When nonvested property interest or power of appointment created.
(1) Except as provided in Subsections (2) and (3) and in Section 75-2-1207, the time of
creation of a nonvested property interest or a power of appointment is determined under general
principles of property law.
(2) For purposes of this part, if there is a person who alone can exercise a power created by
a governing instrument to become the unqualified beneficial owner of:
(a) a nonvested property interest; or
(b) a property interest subject to a power of appointment described in Subsection
75-2-1203(2)(a) or (b), the nonvested property interest or power of appointment is created when the
power to become the unqualified beneficial owner terminates.
(3) For purposes of this title, a nonvested property interest or a power of appointment arising
from a transfer of property to a previously funded trust or other existing property arrangement is
created when the nonvested property interest or power of appointment in the original contribution
was created.
Section 92. Section 75-2-1205 is enacted to read:
75-2-1205. Reformation.
Upon the petition of an interested person, a court shall reform a disposition in the manner that
most closely approximates the transferor's manifested plan of distribution and is within the 90 years
allowed by Subsection 75-2-1203(1)(b), (2)(b), or (3)(b) if:
(1) a nonvested property interest or a power of appointment becomes invalid under Section
75-2-1203;
(2) a class gift is not but might become invalid under Section 75-2-1203 and the time has
arrived when the share of any class member is to take effect in possession or enjoyment; or
(3) a nonvested property interest that is not validated by Subsection 75-2-1203(1)(a) can vest
but not within 90 years after its creation.
Section 93. Section 75-2-1206 is enacted to read:
75-2-1206. Exclusions from statutory rule against perpetuities.
Section 75-2-1203 does not apply to:
(1) a nonvested property interest or a power of appointment arising out of a nondonative
transfer, except a nonvested property interest or a power of appointment arising out of:
(a) a premarital or postmarital agreement;
(b) a separation or divorce settlement;
(c) a spouse's election;
(d) a similar arrangement arising out of a prospective, existing, or previous marital
relationship between the parties;
(e) a contract to make or not to revoke a will or trust;
(f) a contract to exercise or not to exercise a power of appointment;
(g) a transfer in satisfaction of a duty of support; or
(h) a reciprocal transfer;
(2) a fiduciary's power relating to the administration or management of assets, including the
power of a fiduciary to sell, lease, or mortgage property, and the power of a fiduciary to determine
principal and income;
(3) a power to appoint a fiduciary;
(4) a discretionary power of a trustee to distribute principal before termination of a trust to
a beneficiary having an indefeasibly vested interest in the income and principal;
(5) a nonvested property interest held by a charity, government, or governmental agency or
subdivision, if the nonvested property interest is preceded by an interest held by another charity,
government, or governmental agency or subdivision;
(6) a nonvested property interest in or a power of appointment with respect to a trust or other
property arrangement forming part of a pension, profit-sharing, stock bonus, health, disability, death
benefit, income deferral, or other current or deferred benefit plan for one or more employees,
independent contractors, or their beneficiaries or spouses, to which contributions are made for the
purpose of distributing to or for the benefit of the participants or their beneficiaries or spouses the
property, income, or principal in the trust or other property arrangement, except a nonvested property
interest or a power of appointment that is created by an election of a participant or a beneficiary or
spouse;
(7) a property interest, power of appointment, or arrangement that was not subject to the
common-law rule against perpetuities or is excluded by another statute of this state; or
(8) a property interest or arrangement subjected to a time limit under Section 75-2-1001.
Section 94. Section 75-2-1207 is enacted to read:
75-2-1207. Prospective application.
(1) Except as extended by Subsection (2), this section applies to a nonvested property
interest or a power of appointment that is created on or after July 1, 1998. For purposes of this
section, a nonvested property interest or a power of appointment created by the exercise of a power
of appointment is created when the power is irrevocably exercised or when a revocable exercise
becomes irrevocable.
(2) If a nonvested property interest or a power of appointment was created before July 1,
1998 and is determined in a judicial proceeding, commenced on or after July 1, 1998, to violate
Utah's rule against perpetuities as that rule existed before July 1, 1998, a court upon the petition of
an interested person may reform the disposition in the manner that most closely approximates the
transferor's manifested plan of distribution and is within the limits of the rule against perpetuities
applicable when the nonvested property interest or power of appointment was created.
Section 95. Section 75-2-1208 is enacted to read:
75-2-1208. Supersession.
This title supersedes the rule of the common law known as the rule against perpetuities.
Section 96. Section 75-2-1301 is enacted to read:
75-2-1301. Transitional provisions.
(1) On July 1, 1998:
(a) Any act done in any proceeding and any right accrued before July 1, 1998, is not
impaired by the provisions of this title.
(b) If a right is acquired, extinguished, or barred on the expiration of a prescribed period of
time which has commenced to run by the provisions of any statute before July 1, 1997, the
provisions shall remain in force with respect to that right.
(2) Any rule of construction or presumption provided in these provisions applies to
governing instruments executed before July 1, 1997, unless there is a finding of a contrary intent.
Section 97. Section 75-3-303 is amended to read:
75-3-303. Informal probate -- Proof and findings required.
(1) In an informal proceeding for original probate of a will, the registrar shall determine
whether:
(a) the application is complete;
(b) the applicant has made oath or affirmation that the statements contained in the
application are true to the best of his knowledge and belief;
(c) the applicant appears from the application to be an interested person as defined in
Subsection 75-1-201[
(d) on the basis of the statements in the application, venue is proper;
(e) an original, duly executed and apparently unrevoked will is in the registrar's possession;
(f) any notice required by Section 75-3-204 has been given and that the application is not
within Section 75-3-304; and
(g) it appears from the application that the time limit for original probate has not expired.
(2) The application shall be denied if it indicates that a personal representative has been
appointed in another county of this state or except as provided in Subsection (4) [
that this or another will of the decedent has been the subject of a previous probate order.
(3) A will which appears to have the required signatures and which contains an attestation
clause showing that requirements of execution under Section 75-2-502, 75-2-503, or 75-2-506 have
been met shall be probated without further proof. In other cases, the registrar may assume execution
if the will appears to have been properly executed, or he may accept a sworn statement or affidavit
of any person having knowledge of the circumstances of execution, whether or not the person was
a witness to the will.
(4) Informal probate of a will which has been previously probated elsewhere may be granted
at any time upon written application by any interested person, together with deposit of an
authenticated copy of the will and of the statement probating it from the office or court where it was
first probated.
(5) A will from a place which does not provide for probate of a will after death and which
is not eligible for probate under Subsection (1) above may be probated in this state upon receipt by
the registrar of a duly authenticated copy of the will and a duly authenticated certificate of its legal
custodian that the copy filed is a true copy and that the will has become operative under the law of
the other place.
Section 98. Section 75-3-308 is amended to read:
75-3-308. Informal appointment proceedings -- Proof and findings required.
(1) In informal appointment proceedings, the registrar [
(a) the application for informal appointment of a personal representative is complete;
(b) the applicant has made oath or affirmation that the statements contained in the
application are true to the best of his knowledge and belief;
(c) the applicant appears from the application to be an interested person as defined in
Subsection 75-1-201[
(d) on the basis of the statements in the application, venue is proper;
(e) any will to which the requested appointment relates has been formally or informally
probated; but this requirement does not apply to the appointment of a special administrator;
(f) any notice required by Section 75-3-204 has been given; and
(g) from the statements in the application, the person whose appointment is sought has
priority entitling him to the appointment.
(2) Unless Section 75-3-612 controls, the application [
that a personal representative who has not filed a written statement of resignation as provided in
Subsection 75-3-610(3) has been appointed in this or another county of this state, that (unless the
applicant is the domiciliary personal representative or his nominee) the decedent was not domiciled
in this state, and that a personal representative whose appointment has not been terminated has been
appointed by a court in the state of domicile, or that other requirements of this section have not been
met.
Section 99. Section 75-3-906 is amended to read:
75-3-906. Distribution in kind -- Valuation -- Method.
(1) Unless a contrary intention is indicated by the will, the distributable assets of a decedent's
estate shall be distributed in kind to the extent possible through application of the following
provisions:
(a) A specific devisee is entitled to distribution of the thing devised to him, and a spouse or
child who has selected particular assets of an estate as provided in Section [
receive the items selected.
(b) Any homestead or family allowance or devise payable in money may be satisfied by
value in kind provided:
(i) the person entitled to the payment has not demanded payment in cash;
(ii) the property distributed in kind is valued at fair market value as of the date of its
distribution; and
(iii) no residuary devisee has requested that the asset in question remain a part of the residue
of the estate.
(c) For the purpose of valuation under Subsection (1)(b) above, securities regularly traded
on recognized exchanges, if distributed in kind, are valued at the price for the last sale of like
securities traded on the business day prior to distribution, or if there was no sale on that day, at the
median between amounts bid and offered at the close of that day. Assets consisting of sums owed
the decedent or the estate by solvent debtors as to which there is no known dispute or defense are
valued at the sum due with accrued interest or discounted to the date of distribution. For assets which
do not have readily ascertainable values, a valuation as of a date not more than 30 days prior to the
date of distribution, if otherwise reasonable, controls. For purposes of facilitating distribution, the
personal representative may ascertain the value of the assets as of the time of the proposed
distribution in any reasonable way, including the employment of qualified appraisers, even if the
assets may have been previously appraised.
(d) The residuary estate shall be distributed in kind if there is no objection to the proposed
distribution and it is practicable to distribute undivided interests. In other cases, residuary property
may be converted into cash for distribution.
(2) After the probable charges against the estate are known, the personal representative may
mail or deliver a proposal for distribution to all persons who have a right to object to the proposed
distribution. The right of any distributee to object to the proposed distribution on the basis of the
kind or value of asset he is to receive, if not waived earlier in writing, terminates if he fails to object
in writing received by the personal representative within 30 days after mailing or delivery of the
proposal.
Section 100. Section 75-5-102 is amended to read:
75-5-102. Facility of payment or delivery.
(1) Any person under a duty to pay or deliver money or personal property to a minor may
perform this duty, in amounts not exceeding [
the money or property to:
(a) the minor, if he is married or if payment to the minor is expressly authorized by statute;
(b) any person having the care and custody of the minor with whom the minor resides; or
(c) a guardian of the minor.
(2) This section does not apply if the person making payment or delivery has actual
knowledge that a conservator has been appointed or proceedings for appointment of a conservator
of the estate of the minor are pending.
(3) The persons, other than the minor receiving money or property for a minor, are obligated
to apply the money to the support and education of the minor but may not pay themselves except by
way of reimbursement for out-of-pocket expenses for goods and services necessary for the minor's
support. Any excess sums shall be preserved for future support of the minor, and any balance not
so used and any property received for the minor must be turned over to the minor when he attains
majority. Persons who pay or deliver in accordance with provisions of this section are not
responsible for the proper application thereof.
Section 101. Section 75-6-106 is amended to read:
75-6-106. Accounts and transfers nontestamentary.
Any transfers resulting from the application of Section 75-6-104 are effective by reason of
the account contracts involved and this statute and are not to be considered as testamentary or subject
to Chapters 1 through 4 of this code, except as provided in Sections 75-2-201 through [
75-2-214, and except as a consequence of, and to the extent directed by, Sections 75-6-107 and
75-3-916.
Section 102. Section 75-7-401 is amended to read:
75-7-401. Powers of trustee conferred by trust or by law.
(1) The trustee has all powers conferred upon him by the provisions of this part unless limited
in the trust instrument.
(2) An instrument which is not a trust under Subsection 75-1-201[
any section or subsection of this part by reference.
Section 103. Section 78-11-6.5 is amended to read:
78-11-6.5. Definition of heir.
As used in Sections 78-11-7, 78-11-8, and 78-11-12, "heirs" means:
(1) the following surviving persons:
(a) the decedent's spouse;
(b) the decedent's children as provided in Section [
(c) the decedent's natural parents, or if the decedent was adopted, then his adoptive parents;
(d) the decedent's stepchildren who:
(i) are in their minority at the time of decedent's death; and
(ii) are primarily financially dependent on the decedent.
(2) "Heirs" means any blood relative as provided by the law of intestate succession if the
decedent is not survived by a person under Subsections (1)(a), (b), or (c).
Section 104. Repealer.
This act repeals:
Section 75-2-612, Ademption by satisfaction.
Section 75-2-613, Marital deduction formulas -- Wills.
Section 75-2-614, Direction to pay taxes in will.
Section 75-2-1002, Survival of beneficiaries.
Section 75-2-1003, Joint tenants or tenants by the entirety.
Section 75-2-1005, Insurance policies.
Section 75-2-1006, Act does not apply if decedent provides otherwise.
Section 75-2-1007, Construction of part.
Section 75-2-1008, Death before taking effect of act.
Section 105. Effective date.
This act takes effect on July 1, 1998.
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