Advanced Search

Administration of Estates Act 1990


Published: 2012-09-01

Subscribe to a Global-Regulation Premium Membership Today!

Key Benefits:

Subscribe Now for only USD$40 per month.
Administration of Estates Act 1990

c i e
AT 17 of 1990

ADMINISTRATION OF ESTATES ACT 1990

Administration of Estates Act 1990 Index


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 3

c i e
ADMINISTRATION OF ESTATES ACT 1990

Index Section Page

PART I – REPRESENTATION OF DECEASED PERSONS 7

General provisions 7

1 [Repealed] ........................................................................................................................ 7
2 Grants by Chief Registrar .............................................................................................. 7
3 Severance of grant........................................................................................................... 8
4 Number of personal representatives ............................................................................ 8
5 Grant to trust corporation .............................................................................................. 9
6 Grant where no estate is left .......................................................................................... 9
7 Revocation of grant......................................................................................................... 9
8 Substitution or removal of personal representative .................................................. 9
9 Probate rules .................................................................................................................. 10
Grants of probate 10

10 Summons to executor to prove ................................................................................... 10
11 Cesser of right of executor to prove ........................................................................... 10
12 Withdrawal of renunciation ........................................................................................ 10
13 Examination of person with knowledge of will ....................................................... 11
14 Summons to bring in will etc ...................................................................................... 11
15 Grant without notice .................................................................................................... 11
16 Will first proved abroad............................................................................................... 11
17 Chain of representation ............................................................................................... 12
Letters of administration 12

18 Discretion of court ........................................................................................................ 12
19 Notice to beneficiaries .................................................................................................. 12
20 Vesting of estate pending grant .................................................................................. 13
21 Guarantee for administrators ...................................................................................... 13
22 Administration pending suit ....................................................................................... 13
23 Continuance of proceedings after revocation of grant ............................................ 14
24 Administration with the will annexed ....................................................................... 14
25 Grant to Crown nominee etc ....................................................................................... 14
26 Rights and liabilities of administrator ....................................................................... 15
27 Executor not to act ........................................................................................................ 15
Index Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 4 AT 17 of 1990 c

Miscellaneous 15

28 Appointment of minor executor ................................................................................ 15
29 Protection of persons dealing with personal representative .................................. 15
30 Liability of estate of personal representative ........................................................... 16
31 Executor de son tort ....................................................................................................... 16
32 Landlord’s arrest .......................................................................................................... 16
33 Remuneration ............................................................................................................... 16
34 Compromise of probate action ................................................................................... 16
PART II – ADMINISTRATION OF ESTATES 17

Duties of personal representatives 17

35 Duties of personal representatives ............................................................................. 17
Vesting of property 17

36 Vesting of property ...................................................................................................... 17
Collection of assets etc. 18

37 Assets of estate .............................................................................................................. 18
38 Powers of management ............................................................................................... 19
39 Insolvent estates ........................................................................................................... 19
40 Payment of secured debts ........................................................................................... 19
41 Application of assets .................................................................................................... 20
42 Trust for sale on intestacy ........................................................................................... 21
Distribution of assets 22

43 Survivorship .................................................................................................................. 22
44 Power of appropriation ............................................................................................... 22
45 Consents to appropriation .......................................................................................... 24
46 Powers of personal representative to assent etc ...................................................... 24
47 Effect of assent or conveyance .................................................................................... 25
48 Claim to assent or conveyance ................................................................................... 26
49 Tracing of property ...................................................................................................... 27
50 Appointment of trustee for minor ............................................................................. 27
51 Period for distribution ................................................................................................. 28
PART III – DISTRIBUTION ON INTESTACY 28

52 Succession on intestacy ................................................................................................ 28
53 The statutory trusts ...................................................................................................... 30
54 Power to raise lump sum ............................................................................................ 32
55 The matrimonial or civil partnership home ............................................................. 32
56 Partial intestacy ............................................................................................................ 32
57 Illegitimacy .................................................................................................................... 33
58 Legal separation ........................................................................................................... 33
59 Construction of documents ......................................................................................... 34
PART IV – MISCELLANEOUS AND SUPPLEMENTAL 34

60 Small payments ............................................................................................................ 34
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Index


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 5

61 Savings ........................................................................................................................... 35
62 Application of Act......................................................................................................... 35
63 Application to Crown................................................................................................... 35
64 Interpretation ................................................................................................................. 35
65 Transitional provisions, amendments and repeals .................................................. 37
66 Short title and commencement ................................................................................... 38
SCHEDULE 1 39

RIGHTS OF SURVIVING SPOUSE OR CIVIL PARTNER AS RESPECTS
MATRIMONIAL OR CIVIL PARTNERSHIP HOME 39
SCHEDULE 2 43

DEATHS BEFORE COMMENCEMENT ETC. 43
SCHEDULE 3 46

TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS 46
SCHEDULE 4 48

AMENDMENT OF ENACTMENTS 48
SCHEDULE 5 49

ENACTMENTS REPEALED 49
ENDNOTES 51

TABLE OF LEGISLATION HISTORY 51
TABLE OF RENUMBERED PROVISIONS 51
TABLE OF ENDNOTE REFERENCES 51

Administration of Estates Act 1990 Section 1


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 7

c i e
ADMINISTRATION OF ESTATES ACT 1990

Received Royal Assent: 10 July 1990
Passed: 10 July 1990
Commenced: 10 October 1990
AN ACT
to re-enact with minor amendments the enactments relating to the
administration of the estates of deceased persons; and for connected purposes.
PART I – REPRESENTATION OF DECEASED PERSONS

General provisions
1 [Repealed]
1

2 Grants by Chief Registrar

[P1981/54/106]
(1) An application for a grant of representation in common form shall be
made to the Chief Registrar, and any grant made by him shall be granted
under his hand in the name of the High Court.
(2) No grant shall be made by the Chief Registrar —
(a) in any case where there is contention, until the contention is
disposed of; or
(b) in any case where it appears to him that a grant ought not to be
made without the directions of a Deemster; or
(c) in any case where it appears to him that a grant ought not to be
made until any particular matter relating to the grant, or to an
application for it, has been determined by the High Court
otherwise than under subsection (3); or
(d) in any case where it appears to him that some other application
has been made in respect of the estate, or the part of the estate, in
question and has not been either refused or withdrawn.
Section 3 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 8 AT 17 of 1990 c

(3) In any case within subsection (2)(b), the Chief Registrar shall obtain the
directions of a Deemster, who may either —
(a) direct the Chief Registrar to proceed with the matter in
accordance with such instructions as he thinks necessary, or
(b) direct him to take no further action in relation to the matter.
3 Severance of grant

[P1981/54/113]
(1) Subject to subsection (2), representation may be granted in respect of any
part of the estate of a deceased person, limited in any way the court
thinks fit.
(2) Where the estate of a deceased person is known to be insolvent, the grant
of representation to it shall not be severed under subsection (1) except as
regards a trust estate in which he had no beneficial interest.
4 Number of personal representatives

[P1981/54/114]
(1) Representation shall not be granted to more than 4 persons in respect of
the same part of the estate of a deceased person.
(2) Where under a will or intestacy any beneficiary is a minor, any grant of
administration shall be made either —
(a) to a trust corporation (with or without an individual), or
(b) to not less than 2 individuals,
unless it appears to the court to be expedient in all the circumstances to
appoint an individual as sole administrator.
(3) For the purpose of determining whether a minority arises in any case, the
court may act on such evidence as may be prescribed.
(4) If at any time during the minority of a beneficiary under a will or
intestacy there is only one personal representative (not being a trust
corporation), the court may on the application of any person interested
or the guardian or receiver of any such person appoint one or more
additional personal representatives to act while the minority subsists and
until the estate is fully administered.
(5) The appointment of an additional personal representative under
subsection (4) to act with an executor shall not have the effect of
including him in any chain of representation.
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Section 5


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 9

5 Grant to trust corporation

[P1981/54/115]
(1) Where a trust corporation is named in a will as executor, probate may be
granted to the corporation either solely or jointly with any other person
named in the will as executor, as the case may require.
(2) Administration may be granted to a trust corporation, either solely or
jointly with another person.
(3) Where representation is granted to a trust corporation, the corporation
may act accordingly as executor or administrator, as the case may be.
(4) Representation shall not be granted to a nominee of a trust corporation.
(5) Any officer authorised for the purpose by a trust corporation or its
directors or governing body may, on behalf of the corporation, swear
affidavits, give security and do any other act which the court may
require with a view to the grant to the corporation of representation; and
the acts of an officer so authorised shall be binding on the corporation.
6 Grant where no estate is left

Representation may be granted in respect of a deceased person notwithstanding
that he left no estate.
7 Revocation of grant

[P1981/54/121]
Where it appears to the court that a grant of representation either ought not to
have been made or contains an error, the court may, if satisfied that it would be
revoked at the instance of a party interested, revoke the grant.
8 Substitution or removal of personal representative

[P1985/61/50]
(1) On an application made to the court for the purpose by or on behalf of
the personal representative of, or a beneficiary of the estate of, a deceased
person, the court may —
(a) appoint a person (a ‘substituted personal representative’) to act as
personal representative of the deceased in place of the existing
personal representative or representatives or any of them; or
(b) if there are 2 or more existing personal representatives of the
deceased, terminate the appointment of one or more (but not all)
of them.
(2) Where the court appoints a person to act as substituted personal
representative of a deceased person, then —
(a) if that person is appointed to act with an executor or executors,
the appointment shall (except for the purpose of including him in
Section 9 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 10 AT 17 of 1990 c

any chain of representation) constitute him executor of the
deceased as from the date of the appointment; and
(b) in any other case the appointment shall constitute that person
administrator of the deceased’s estate as from the date of the
appointment.
(3) In this section ‘beneficiary’, in relation to the estate of a deceased person,
means a person who under the will of the deceased or under Part III is
beneficially interested in the estate.
9 Probate rules

[P1981/54/127]
The Deemsters may make rules (‘probate rules’) for regulating and prescribing
the practice and procedure of the court with respect to non-contentious or
common form probate business.
Grants of probate
10 Summons to executor to prove

[P1981/54/112]
The court may summon any person named as executor in a will to prove, or
renounce probate of, the will, and to do all such other things concerning the will
as the court had power to order such a person to do immediately before the 5th
July 1961.
11 Cesser of right of executor to prove

[P1925/23/5]
Where a person appointed executor by a will —
(a) survives the testator but dies without having taken out probate of
the will; or
(b) is cited to take out probate of the will and does not appear to the
citation; or
(c) renounces probate of the will;
his rights in respect of the executorship shall wholly cease, and the
representation to the testator and the administration of his estate shall devolve
and be committed in like manner as if that person had not been appointed
executor.
12 Withdrawal of renunciation

[P1925/23/6]
(1) Where an executor who has renounced probate has been permitted to
withdraw the renunciation and prove the will, the probate shall take
effect, and be deemed always to have taken effect, without prejudice to
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Section 13


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 11

the previous acts and dealings of and notices to any other personal
representative who has previously taken out representation.
(2) A memorandum of the subsequent probate shall be minuted on the
original probate or administration.
13 Examination of person with knowledge of will

[P1981/54/122]
(1) Where it appears that there are reasonable grounds for believing that any
person has knowledge of any document which is or purports to be a
testamentary document, the court may, whether or not any legal
proceedings are pending, order him to attend for the purpose of being
examined in open court.
(2) The court may —
(a) require any person who is before it in compliance with an order
under subsection (1) to answer any question relating to the
document concerned; and
(b) if appropriate, order him to bring in the document in such manner
as the court may direct.
(3) Any person who, having been required by the court to do so under this
section, fails to attend for examination, answer any question or bring in
any document shall be guilty of contempt of court.
14 Summons to bring in will etc

[P1981/54/123]
Where it appears that any person has in his possession, custody or power any
document which is or purports to be a testamentary document, the court may,
whether or not any legal proceedings are pending, issue a summons requiring
him to bring in the document in such manner as the court may in the summons
direct.
15 Grant without notice

Except in such cases as may be prescribed, a will shall be admitted to probate in
common form without notice being given to any person.
16 Will first proved abroad

[V p352/19]
(1) In any case where a will has been first proved in any court of competent
jurisdiction outside the Island, the production of an office copy of the
will, duly certified or authenticated as required by the Evidence Act 1871
for the purpose of being admissible in evidence, or of the probate copy of
the will, shall be prima facie evidence of the will having been duly
proved.
Section 17 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 12 AT 17 of 1990 c

(2) In such a case, probate or administration may be granted on the office
copy, or on a copy of the probate copy certified by the Chief Registrar.
17 Chain of representation

[P1925/23/7]
(1) An executor of a sole or last surviving executor of a testator is the
executor of that testator.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to an executor who does not prove the will
of his testator, and in the case of an executor who on his death leaves
surviving him some other executor of his testator who afterwards proves
the will of that testator, it shall cease to apply on such probate being
granted.
(3) So long as the chain of representation is unbroken, the last executor in
the chain is the executor of every preceding testator.
(4) The chain of representation is broken by —
(a) an intestacy;
(b) the failure of a testator to appoint an executor; or
(c) the failure to obtain probate of a will;
but is not broken by a temporary grant of administration if probate is
subsequently granted.
(5) Every person in the chain of representation to a testator —
(a) has the same rights in respect of the estate of that testator as the
original executor would have had if living; and
(b) is, to the extent to which the estate of that testator has come to his
hands, answerable as if he were an original executor.
Letters of administration
18 Discretion of court

In granting administration the court shall have regard to the rights of all
persons interested in the estate of the deceased person, or the proceeds of sale
thereof.
19 Notice to beneficiaries

An application for administration of an intestate estate shall be made with
notice to all persons in the Island who under Part III are beneficially interested
in the estate.
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Section 20


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 13

20 Vesting of estate pending grant

(1) Where a person dies without leaving a valid will, his estate vests in the
Treasury.
(2) Where a person dies leaving a valid will and —
(a) at the time of his death there is no executor with power to obtain
probate of the will, or
(b) at any time before probate of the will is granted there ceases to be
any executor with power to obtain probate,
his estate vests in the Treasury from the time specified in paragraph (a)
or (b), as the case may be.
(3) The vesting by virtue of this section of any estate in the Treasury shall
not, without more, confer or impose on the Treasury any powers, duties,
rights, equities, obligations or liabilities in respect of the estate.
(4) Any estate or part of an estate vested in the Treasury under
subsection (1) or (2) shall cease to be so vested on the grant of
representation in respect of the estate or part in question.
21 Guarantee for administrators

[1987/8/11; P1981/54/120]
(1) As a condition of granting administration the court may, subject to and
in accordance with probate rules, require one or more sureties to
guarantee that they will make good, within any limit imposed by the
court on the total liability of the surety or sureties, any loss which any
person interested in the administration of the estate of the deceased
person may suffer in consequence of a breach by the administrator of his
duties as such.
(2) A guarantee given in pursuance of any such requirement shall enure for
the benefit of any person interested in the estate of the deceased as if
contained in a deed made by the surety or sureties and, where there are 2
or more sureties, as if they had bound themselves jointly and severally.
(3) No action shall be brought on any such guarantee without the leave of
the court.
(4) This section does not apply where administration is granted to the
Attorney General or the Treasury, or in such other cases as may be
prescribed.
22 Administration pending suit

[P1981/54/117]
(1) Where any legal proceedings concerning the validity of the will of a
deceased person, or for obtaining, recalling or revoking any grant, are
pending, the court may grant administration of the estate of the deceased
Section 23 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 14 AT 17 of 1990 c

to an administrator, who shall, subject to subsection (2), have all the
rights and powers of a general administrator.
(2) An administrator pending suit shall be subject to the immediate control
of the court and act under its direction; and, except in such circumstances
as may be prescribed, no distribution of the estate of the deceased person
or any part of it shall be made by such an administrator without the
leave of the court.
23 Continuance of proceedings after revocation of grant

[P1925/23/17]
If, while any legal proceedings are pending in the court by or against an
administrator to whom temporary letters of administration have been granted,
those letters of administration are revoked, the court may order that the
proceedings be continued by or against the new personal representative in like
manner as if they had been originally commenced by or against him, but subject
to such conditions and variations, if any, as the court directs.
24 Administration with the will annexed

[P1981/54/119]
(1) Letters of administration with the will annexed shall continue to be
granted in every case in which the court had power to make such a grant
before the 5th July 1961.
(2) Where administration with the will annexed is granted, the will of the
deceased shall be performed and observed in the same manner as if
probate of it had been granted to an executor.
25 Grant to Crown nominee etc

[P1925/23/30]
(1) Where administration of the estate of any deceased person is granted to a
nominee of the Crown or the Treasury (whether the Attorney General or
a person nominated by him, or any other person), any legal proceedings
by or against that nominee for the recovery of the estate or any part or
share of it shall be of the same character and shall be instituted and
carried on in the same manner, and be subject to the same rules of law
and equity (including any rules of limitation), in all respects as if the
administration had been granted to the nominee as one of the persons
interested under this Act in the estate of the deceased.
(2) Any information or other proceeding on the part of Her Majesty shall not
be filed or instituted, and a petition of right shall not be presented, in
respect of the estate of any deceased person or any part or share of it, or
any claim thereon, except within the same time and subject to the same
rules of law and equity within and subject to which a proceeding for the
like purposes might be instituted by or against a subject.
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Section 26


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 15

26 Rights and liabilities of administrator

[P1925/23/21]
Every person to whom administration of the estate of a deceased person is
granted shall, subject to the limitations contained in the grant, have the same
rights and liabilities and be accountable in like manner as if he were an executor
or trustee.
27 Executor not to act

[P1925/23/15]
Where administration has been granted in respect of the estate of a deceased
person or any part of it, no person may bring any action or otherwise act as
executor of the deceased person in respect of the estate or part comprised in or
affected by the grant until the grant has been recalled or revoked.
Miscellaneous
28 Appointment of minor executor

[P1981/54/118]
Where a testator by his will appoints a minor to be an executor, the appointment
shall not operate —
(a) to vest in the minor the estate of the testator or any part of it, or
(b) to constitute him a personal representative for any purpose,
unless and until probate is granted to him in accordance with probate rules.
29 Protection of persons dealing with personal representative

[P1925/20/204(1)]
(1) A grant of representation shall not as against a purchaser be invalidated
on the ground of want of jurisdiction, or of want of any concurrence,
consent, notice or service, whether the purchaser has notice of any such
want or not.
(2) Every person making or permitting to be made any payment or
disposition in good faith under a grant of representation shall be
indemnified and protected in so doing, notwithstanding any defect or
circumstance whatsoever affecting the validity of the grant.
(3) Where a grant of representation is revoked or varied, all payments and
dispositions made in good faith to the personal representative under the
grant before the revocation or variation thereof are a valid discharge to
the person making them; and the personal representative who acted
under the revoked or varied grant may reimburse himself in respect of
any payments or dispositions made by him which the person to whom
representation is afterwards granted might have properly made.
Section 30 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 16 AT 17 of 1990 c

(4) All conveyances of any interest in any estate of a deceased person by a
person to whom representation is granted are valid, notwithstanding any
subsequent revocation or variation of the grant.
30 Liability of estate of personal representative

[P1925/23/29]
Where a person as personal representative of a deceased person (including an
executor in his own wrong) wastes or converts to his own use any part of the
estate of the deceased, his personal representative shall to the extent of the
available assets of the defaulter be liable and chargeable in respect of such waste
or conversion in the same manner as the defaulter would have been if living.
31 Executor de son tort

[P1925/23/28]
If any person, to the defrauding of creditors or without full valuable
consideration, obtains, receives or holds any estate of a deceased person or
effects the release of any debt or liability due to the estate of the deceased, he
shall be charged as executor in his own wrong to the extent of the estate
received or coming to his hands, or the debt or liability released, after
deducting —
(a) any debt for valuable consideration and without fraud due to him
from the deceased person at the time of his death; and
(b) any payment made by him which might properly be made by a
personal representative.
32 Landlord’s arrest

A personal representative may take out a landlord’s arrest for rent due or
accruing to the deceased in like manner as the deceased might have done if
living, and the enactments relating to a landlord’s arrest shall apply to any
arrest made pursuant to this section.
33 Remuneration

A grant of administration, and an order under section 4(4) or 8(1) appointing an
additional or substituted personal representative, may include provision
entitling the personal representative thereby appointed to be paid out of the
estate of the deceased such reasonable remuneration as may be specified in or
determined in accordance with such provision, on such terms (including terms
as to the submission of bills of charges for taxation) as may be so specified.
34 Compromise of probate action

[P1985/61/49]
(1) Where on a compromise of a probate action —
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Section 35


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 17

(a) the court is invited to pronounce for the validity of one or more
wills, or against the validity of one or more wills, or for the
validity of one or more wills and against the validity of one or
more other wills; and
(b) the court is satisfied that consent to the making of the
pronouncement or each of the pronouncements in question has
been given by or on behalf of every relevant beneficiary,
the court may without more pronounce accordingly.
(2) In this section —
“probate action” means an action for the grant of probate or administration or
the revocation or variation of such a grant, or for a decree pronouncing
for or against the validity of an alleged will, not being an action which is
non-contentious or common form probate business;
“relevant beneficiary”, in relation to a pronouncement relating to any will or
wills of a deceased person, means —
(a) a person who under any such will is beneficially interested in the
deceased’s estate; and
(b) where the effect of the pronouncement would be to cause the
estate to devolve as on an intestacy or partial intestacy, or to
prevent it from so devolving, a person who under Part III is
beneficially interested in the estate.
PART II – ADMINISTRATION OF ESTATES

Duties of personal representatives
35 Duties of personal representatives

[1987/8/2; P1925/23/25; P1971/25/9]
The personal representative of a deceased person shall be under a duty to
collect and get in the real and personal estate of the deceased and administer it
according to law and, when required to do so by the court —
(a) to exhibit on oath in the court a full inventory of the estate; and
(b) to render an account of the administration of the estate to the
court.
Vesting of property
36 Vesting of property

[1985/9/1; P1925/23/1-3]
(1) Any property to which a deceased person was entitled for an interest not
ceasing on his death shall on his death, notwithstanding any
Section 37 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 18 AT 17 of 1990 c

testamentary disposition thereof, devolve from time to time on the
personal representative of the deceased.
(2) Without prejudice to the powers of a personal representative, this section
does not affect —
(a) any rule as to marshalling or administration of assets;
(b) any beneficial interest under a testamentary disposition;
(c) any mode of dealing with the beneficial interest in any property
or the proceedings of sale thereof; or
(d) the right of any person claiming to be interested in any property
to take proceedings for the protection or recovery thereof against
any person other than the personal representative.
(3) For the purposes of this section —
(a) a testator shall be deemed to have been entitled at his death to any
interest in property disposed of under a general power of
appointment by his will;
(b) the interest of a deceased person held under a joint tenancy or on
a joint account where another tenant or holder survives him shall
be deemed to be an interest ceasing on his death; and
(c) on the death of a corporator sole his interest in the corporation’s
property shall be deemed to be an interest ceasing on his death.
Paragraph (c) applies on the demise of the Crown as respects property
vested in the Crown as a corporation sole.
(4) For the purposes of any enactment or instrument the personal
representatives of a deceased person are deemed to be his heirs and
assigns.
Collection of assets etc.
37 Assets of estate

[P1925/23/32]
(1) The real and personal estate, whether legal or equitable, of a deceased
person, to the extent of his beneficial interest therein, and any property
which a deceased person in pursuance of any general power of
appointment disposes of by his will, are assets for payment of his debts
(whether by special or simple contract) and liabilities.
(2) Any disposition by will inconsistent with subsection (1) is void as against
the creditors.
(3) The court shall if necessary administer the estate for the purpose of the
payment of the debts and liabilities.
(4) Subsections (1) to (3) are without prejudice to the rights of
incumbrancers.
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Section 38


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 19

38 Powers of management

[P1925/23/39]
(1) In dealing with the estate of a deceased person, his personal
representative shall have, for the purposes of administration or during
the minority of any beneficiary or the subsistence of any life interest, or
until the period of distribution expires —
(a) all the powers, discretions and duties conferred or imposed by
law on trustees holding upon an effectual trust for sale; and
(b) all the powers conferred by statute on trustees for sale.
(1A) Subsection (1) is without prejudice to the powers conferred on personal
representatives by the Trustee Act 2001.2

(2) Accordingly every contract entered into by a personal representative
shall be binding on and enforceable against and by the personal
representative for the time being of the deceased, and may be carried
into effect or be varied or rescinded by him and, in the case of a contract
entered into by his predecessor, as if it had been entered into by himself.
(3) Nothing in this section affects the right of any person to require an assent
or conveyance to be made.
39 Insolvent estates

[P1925/23/34(1) and Sch 1]
Where the estate of a deceased person is insolvent, his estate shall be
administered in accordance with the following rules —
(a) the funeral, testamentary and administration expenses have
priority;
(b) subject to paragraph (a), the same rules shall prevail and be
observed as to —
(i) the respective rights of secured and unsecured creditors;
(ii) debts and liabilities provable;
(iii) the valuation of annuities and future and contingent
liabilities; and
(iv) the priorities of debts and liabilities;
as apply for the time being under the law of bankruptcy with
respect to the assets of persons adjudged bankrupt.
40 Payment of secured debts

[P1925/23/35]
(1) Where —
(a) a person dies possessed of or entitled to, or under a general power
of appointment by his will disposes of, an interest in property
which at the time of his death is charged with the payment of
Section 41 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 20 AT 17 of 1990 c

money, whether by way of mortgage, equitable charge or
otherwise (including a lien for unpaid purchase money), and
(b) the deceased has not by will, deed or other document signified a
contrary or other intention,
the interest so charged shall, as between the different persons claiming
through the deceased, be primarily liable for payment of the charge.
(2) Every part of the said interest, according to its value, shall bear a
proportionate part of the charge on the estate.
(3) Such contrary or other intention shall not be deemed to be signified —
(a) by a general direction for the payment of debts or of all the debts
of the testator out of his personal estate, or his residuary real and
personal estate, or his residuary real estate; or
(b) by a charge of debts upon any such estate;
unless such intention is further signified by words expressly or by
necessary implication referring to all or some part of the charge.
(4) Nothing in this section affects the right of a person entitled to the charge
to obtain payment or satisfaction thereof either out of the other assets of
the deceased or otherwise.
41 Application of assets

(1) Where the estate of a deceased person is solvent, his estate shall, subject
to section 40 and to probate rules, be applicable towards the discharge of
the funeral, testamentary and administration expenses, debts and
liabilities payable out of the estate in the following order —
(i) Property of the deceased specifically appropriated or given
(either by a specific or a general description) for the
payment of debts.
(ii) Property of the deceased undisposed of by will, subject to
the retention out of it of a fund sufficient to meet any
pecuniary legacies.
(iii) Property of the deceased not specifically given but
included (either by a specific or a general description) in a
residuary gift, subject to the retention out of it of a fund
sufficient to meet any pecuniary legacies, so far as not
provided for under (ii) above.
(iv) Property of the deceased charged with, or given (either by
a specific or a general description) subject to a charge for,
the payment of debts.
(v) The fund (if any) retained to meet pecuniary legacies.
(vi) Property specifically given, rateably according to value.
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Section 42


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 21

(vii) Property disposed of by will under a general power of
appointment, rateably according to value.
(2) Subsection (1) has effect subject to the provisions of the will of the
deceased person.
42 Trust for sale on intestacy

[P1925/23/33]
(1) On the death of any person intestate as to any estate, that estate shall be
held by his personal representative —
(a) as to land, upon trust to sell the same;
(b) as to estate other than land, upon trust to call in, sell and convert
into money such part of it as does not consist of money,
with power to postpone such sale and conversion for such period as the
personal representative, without being liable to account, may think
proper.
(2) Unless the personal representative sees special reason for sale —
(a) a reversionary interest shall not be sold until it falls into
possession, and
(b) personal chattels shall not be sold unless required for purposes of
administration owing to want of other assets.
(3) Out of the net money arising from the sale and conversion of such estate
after payment of expenses, and out of the ready money of the deceased
so far as not disposed of by his will (if any), the personal representative
shall pay all such funeral, testamentary and administration expenses,
debts and other liabilities as are properly payable out of them having
regard to the rules contained in this Part, and out of the residue of the
money the personal representative shall set aside a fund sufficient to
provide for any pecuniary legacies given by the will (if any) of the
deceased.
(4) During the minority of any beneficiary and pending the distribution of
the whole or any part of the estate of the deceased, the personal
representative may invest the residue of the said money, or so much of it
as has not been distributed, under the Trustee Act 2001.3

(5) The residue of the said money and any investments for the time being
representing the same, including (but without prejudice to the trust for
sale) any part of the estate of the deceased which may be retained unsold
and is not required for purposes of administration, is in this Act referred
to as ‘the residuary estate of the intestate’.
(6) The income (including net rents and profits of land after payment of
rates, taxes, rent, insurance, repairs and other outgoings properly
attributable to income) of so much of the estate of the deceased as has not
been disposed of by his will (if any) and is not required for
Section 43 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 22 AT 17 of 1990 c

administration may, however the estate is invested, be treated and
applied as income, and no part of it shall be added to capital except
accumulations of surplus income (if any) during a minority or pending a
contingency.
(7) Subsection (6) applies to income accrued within one year before the
death of the deceased and paid after the death as it applies to income
accruing after the death, but otherwise it does not apply to income
accrued before the death.
(8) Nothing in this section affects the rights of any creditor of the deceased.
(9) Where the deceased leaves a will, this section has effect subject to the
provisions contained in the will.
Distribution of assets
43 Survivorship

(1) Where 2 or more persons have died in circumstances rendering it
uncertain which of them survived the other or others, then, subject to any
order of the court and to the provisions of any instrument, the deaths
shall for all purposes affecting the title to property be presumed to have
occurred simultaneously, and accordingly no one of them shall be
deemed to have survived the other or others.
(2) Where 2 or more persons died, or are deemed by subsection (1) to have
died, simultaneously —
(a) any land held by them as beneficial joint tenants shall (except
where another person is a joint tenant with them) be deemed to be
held by them as tenants in common in equal shares;
(b) any property other than land held by them beneficially on joint
account shall (except where another person is a joint holder with
them) be deemed to be held by them in equal shares;
(c) any gift by will by one of them to another of them (“the
beneficiary”) of an estate or interest in property, with a gift over
to some other person or persons in the event of the death of the
beneficiary in the testator’s lifetime, shall take effect as if the
beneficiary had died in the testator’s lifetime.
44 Power of appropriation

[P1925/23/41(pt)]
(1) Subject to section 45, a personal representative may appropriate any part
of the estate of the deceased (including things in action) in its actual
condition or state of investment at the time of appropriation in or
towards satisfaction of any gift by the deceased, or of any other share or
interest in his estate, whether a settled interest or not, as to the personal
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Section 44


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 23

representative may seem just and reasonable, according to the respective
rights of the persons interested in the estate of the deceased.
(2) An appropriation shall not be made under this section so as to affect
prejudicially any specific gift.
(3) Any property duly appropriated under the powers conferred by this
section shall thereafter be treated as an authorised investment, and may
be retained or dealt with accordingly.
(4) For the purposes of such appropriation, the personal representative may
ascertain and fix the value of the respective parts of the estate and the
liabilities of the deceased as he may think fit, and shall for that purpose
employ a duly qualified valuer in any case where that may be necessary,
and may make any conveyance or assent which may be necessary for
giving effect to the appropriation.
(5) An appropriation under this section shall bind all persons interested in
the estate of the deceased whose consent is not required by section 45.
(6) The personal representative shall, in making the appropriation, have
regard to the rights of any person who may thereafter come into
existence, or who cannot be found or ascertained at the time of
appropriation, and of any other person whose consent is not required by
section 45.
(7) This section does not prejudice any other power of appropriation
conferred by law or by the will (if any) of the deceased, and has effect
with any extended powers conferred by the will (if any).
(8) Where an appropriation is made under this section, the property
appropriated shall remain subject to all trusts for sale and powers of
leasing, disposition and management or varying of investments which
would have been applicable thereto or to the gift or interest in respect of
which the appropriation is made, if no such appropriation had been
made.
(9) If after any land has been appropriated in purported exercise of the
powers of this section, the person to whom it was conveyed disposes of it
or any interest therein, then, in favour of a purchaser for money or
money’s worth, the appropriation shall be deemed to have been made in
accordance with this section and after all the consents (if any) required
by section 45 had been given.
(10) In this section and section 45 ‘settled interest’ includes any settled gift,
share or interest, any annuity, and any gift, share or interest to which a
person is not absolutely entitled in possession at the date of the
appropriation.
(11) This section extends to property over which the deceased exercised a
general power of appointment, and authorises the setting up of a fund to
answer an annuity by means of the income of the fund or otherwise.
Section 45 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 24 AT 17 of 1990 c

45 Consents to appropriation

[P1925/23/41(pt)]
(1) An appropriation of property, whether or not an investment authorised
by law or the will (if any) of the deceased, shall not be made under
section 44 except —
(a) where made for the benefit of a person absolutely and beneficially
entitled in possession, with the consent of that person;
(b) where made in respect of any settled gift or interest, with the
consent of either the trustee thereof (if any, not being the personal
representative) or the person for the time being entitled to the
income.
(2) If the person whose consent is required under subsection (1) is a minor or
is incapable, by reason of mental disorder within the meaning of the
Mental Health Act 1998, of managing and administering his property and
affairs, the consent shall be given on his behalf by his parent or guardian
or receiver or, if in the case of a minor there is no parent or guardian, by
the court on the application of his next friend.4

(3) No consent under subsection (1), except that of a trustee under
subsection (1)(b), is required on behalf of a person who may come into
existence after the time of appropriation or who cannot be found or
ascertained at that time.
(4) No consent under subsection (1) is required on behalf of a person
suffering from mental disorder if —
(a) no receiver is acting for that person, and
(b) the appropriation is of an investment authorised by law or by the
will (if any) of the deceased for the investment of money subject
to the trust.
46 Powers of personal representative to assent etc

[P1925/23/36(pt) and 43(1)]
(1) A personal representative of a deceased person may assent to the vesting
in any person who is entitled thereto, either beneficially or as a trustee or
personal representative, of any estate or interest in land to which the
deceased was entitled or over which he exercised a general power of
appointment by his will, and which devolved on the personal
representative.
(2) An assent to the vesting of a legal estate shall be in writing, signed by the
personal representative and shall name the person in whose favour it is
given.
(3) Any person, other than a purchaser for money or money’s worth, in
whose favour an assent or conveyance of a legal estate is made by a
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Section 47


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 25

personal representative may require that the assent or conveyance be
recorded in the General Registry at the cost of the estate of the deceased.
This subsection does not apply in the case of registered land within the
meaning of the Land Registration Act 1982.
(4) A personal representative may, as a condition of giving an assent or
making a conveyance, require security for the discharge of any debt or
liability to which the estate or interest to which it relates would have
been subject if there had not been any assent or conveyance, but shall not
be entitled to postpone the giving of an assent merely by reason of the
subsistence of any such debt or liability if reasonable arrangements have
been made for discharging it; and an assent may be given subject to any
legal estate or charge by way of mortgage.
(5) A personal representative, before giving an assent or making a
conveyance in favour of any person entitled, may permit that person to
take possession of the land, and such possession shall not prejudicially
affect the right of the personal representative to take or resume
possession or his power to convey the land as if he were in possession of
it, but subject to the interest of any lessee, tenant or occupier in
possession or in actual occupation of the land.
47 Effect of assent or conveyance

[P1925/23/36 (pt)]
(1) Subject to subsection (3), an assent under section 46 shall operate to vest
in that person the estate or interest to which the assent relates and, unless
a contrary intention appears, the assent shall relate back to the death of
the deceased.
(2) An assent by a personal representative of a deceased person shall (unless
expressly negatived in the assent) imply a covenant that he has not
executed or done or knowingly suffered or been party or privy to any
deed or thing —
(a) whereby or by reason whereof the subject matter of the assent or
any part thereof is or may be impeached, charged, affected or
encumbered in title, estate or otherwise; or
(b) whereby or by means whereof he is in anywise hindered in
assenting to the vesting of the subject matter of the assent or any
part thereof in the manner in which it is expressed to be vested.
(3) An assent to the vesting of a legal estate complying with section 46(2)
shall (subject to section 29 of the Registration of Deeds Act 1961 and to the
provisions of the Land Registration Act 1982) operate to vest in the person
in whose favour it is made the legal estate to which it relates; and
(subject to subsection (4)) an assent not in writing or not in favour of a
named person shall not be effectual to pass a legal estate.
Section 48 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 26 AT 17 of 1990 c

(4) Where by virtue of any testamentary disposition of a deceased person
any land stands limited to or in trust for persons by way of succession,
an assent by the personal representative to the vesting of a legal estate in
possession in that land in the person for the time being entitled thereto
shall operate from time to time to vest in the persons entitled thereto any
estates or interests arising under that disposition and expectant (whether
mediately or immediately) upon the determination of the estate of that
person.
(5) An assent or conveyance by a personal representative in respect of a
legal estate shall, in favour of a purchaser for money or money’s worth,
unless (except in the case of registered land within the meaning of the
Land Registration Act 1982) a previous assent or conveyance affecting that
legal estate has been recorded in the General Registry, be taken as
sufficient evidence that the person in whose favour the assent or
conveyance is given or made is the person entitled to have the legal
estate conveyed to him, and upon the proper trusts (if any), but shall not
otherwise prejudicially affect the claim of any person entitled to the
estate vested or conveyed or any charge thereon.
(6) A conveyance of a legal estate by a personal representative to a
purchaser for money or money’s worth shall not be invalidated by
reason only that the purchaser has notice that all the debts, liabilities,
funeral, testamentary and administration expenses, duties (if any) and
legacies of the deceased have been discharged or provided for.
(7) An assent or conveyance given or made by a personal representative
shall not, except in favour of a purchaser for money or money’s worth of
a legal estate, prejudice the right of the personal representative or any
other person —
(a) to recover the estate or interest to which the assent or conveyance
relates, or
(b) to be indemnified out of that estate or interest, against any debt or
liability to which the estate or interest would have been subject if
there had not been any assent or conveyance.
48 Claim to assent or conveyance

[P1925/23/43(2)]
Any person who against the personal representative of a deceased person
claims —
(a) possession of any land, or
(b) the appointment of a receiver of any land, or
(c) a conveyance of land or an assent to the vesting of land,
may apply to the court for directions, and the court may make such vesting or
other order as may be considered proper, and the provisions of the Trustee Act
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Section 49


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 27

1961 relating to vesting orders and to the appointment of a person to convey
shall apply.
49 Tracing of property

[P1925/23/38]
(1) An assent or conveyance by a personal representative to a person other
than a purchaser for money or money’s worth does not prejudice the
rights of any person to follow the property to which the assent or
conveyance relates, or any property representing it, into the hands of the
person in whom it is vested by the assent or conveyance, or of any other
person (not being a purchaser for money or money’s worth) who may
have received any such property or in whom it may be vested.
(2) Notwithstanding any such assent or conveyance, the court may, on the
application of any creditors or other person interested —
(a) order a sale, exchange, mortgage, charge, lease, payment, transfer
or transaction to be carried out which the court considers requisite
for the purpose of giving effect to the rights of the persons
interested;
(b) declare that the person, not being a purchaser for money or
money’s worth, in whom the property is vested is a trustee for
those purposes;
(c) give directions respecting the preparation and execution of any
conveyance or other instrument or as to any other matter required
for giving effect to the order;
(d) make any vesting order, or appoint a person to convey, in
accordance with the provisions of the Trustee Act 1961.
(3) This section does not prejudice the rights of a purchaser for money or
money’s worth or a person deriving title under him.
50 Appointment of trustee for minor

[P1925/23/42]
(1) Where a minor is absolutely entitled to any gift or interest under the will
or on the intestacy of a deceased person, and the gift or interest is not
under the will (if any) given to the trustees for the minor, the personal
representative of the deceased may —
(a) appoint a trust corporation, or 2 or more individuals not
exceeding 4 (whether or not including one or more personal
representatives), to be trustees of the gift or interest for the minor,
and
(b) execute or do any act necessary for vesting the gift or interest in
the trustees so appointed.
Section 51 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 28 AT 17 of 1990 c

(2) On an appointment under this section, the personal representative as
such shall be discharged from all further liability in respect of the gift or
interest, which may be either —
(a) retained in its existing condition or state of investment, or
(b) converted into money and invested in any authorised investment.
51 Period for distribution

[P1925/23/44]
Subject to the provisions of this Part, a personal representative of a deceased
person is not bound to distribute the estate of the deceased before the expiration
of one year from the death.
PART III – DISTRIBUTION ON INTESTACY

52 Succession on intestacy

[1973/7/1-3; 1979/17/2; 1982/8/23]
(1) The residuary estate of an intestate shall be distributed in the following
manner or held on the following trusts —
(a) If the intestate leaves a spouse or civil partner but no issue, the
residuary estate shall be held in trust for the surviving spouse or
civil partner absolutely.5

(b) If the intestate leaves both a spouse or civil partner and issue,
then —
(i) the surviving spouse or civil partner shall take the personal
chattels absolutely, and6

(ii) in addition the residuary estate (except the personal
chattels) shall stand charged with the payment of a net
sum of £250,000, free of duties (if any) and costs, to the
surviving spouse or civil partner with interest at such rate
as the Treasury may by order prescribe from the date of
death until paid or appropriated, and7

(iii) subject to providing for that sum and the interest thereon,
the residuary estate (except the personal chattels) shall be
held, as to one half, on trust for the surviving spouse or
civil partner absolutely, and as to the other half, on the
statutory trusts for the issue of the intestate.8

(c) If the intestate leaves issue but no spouse or civil partner, the
residuary estate shall be held on the statutory trusts for the issue
of the intestate.9

Administration of Estates Act 1990 Section 52


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 29

(d) If the intestate leaves no spouse or civil partner and no issue but
both parents, the residuary estate shall be held in trust for the
father and mother in equal shares absolutely.10

(e) If the intestate leaves no spouse or civil partner and no issue but
one parent, the residuary estate shall be held in trust for the
surviving father or mother absolutely.11

(f) If the intestate leaves no spouse or civil partner, no issue and no
parent, the residuary estate shall be held in trust for the following
persons living at the death of the intestate, and in the following
order and manner —
(i) on the statutory trusts for the brothers and sisters of the
whole blood of the intestate; but if no person takes an
absolutely vested interest under those trusts, then
(ii) on the statutory trusts for the brothers and sisters of the
half blood of the intestate; but if no person takes an
absolutely vested interest under those trusts, then
(iii) for the grandparents of the intestate and, if more than one
surviving the intestate, in equal shares, but if there is no
member of that class, then
(iv) on the statutory trusts for the uncles and aunts of the
intestate (being brothers or sisters of the whole blood of a
parent of the intestate); but if no person takes an absolutely
vested interest under those trusts, then
(v) on the statutory trusts for the uncles and aunts of the
intestate (being brothers or sisters of the half blood of a
parent of the intestate); but if no person takes an absolutely
vested interest under those trusts, then
(vi) on the statutory trusts for the great-uncles and great-aunts
of the intestate (being brothers or sisters of the whole blood
of a grandparent of the intestate); but if no person takes an
absolutely vested interest under those trusts, then
(vii) on the statutory trusts for the great-uncles and great-aunts
of the intestate (being brothers or sisters of the half blood
of a grandparent of the intestate).12

(g) If no person takes an absolute interest under paragraph (a) to (f),
the residuary estate of the intestate shall belong to the Treasury as
bona vacantia.
(2) The Treasury may, out of the whole or any part of the property
devolving on it under subsection (1), provide in accordance with the
existing practice for dependants of the intestate, and other persons for
whom the intestate might reasonably have been expected to make
provision.
Section 53 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 30 AT 17 of 1990 c

(3) The Treasury may by order alter the amount of the net sum specified in
subsection (1)(b) (or the amount substituted therefor by a previous order
under this subsection), but no such order shall have effect unless it is
approved by Tynwald.
(4) The interest payable under subsection (1)(b) shall be primarily payable
out of income.
(5) Without prejudice to subsection (2), subsection (1) has effect subject to
the provisions of the Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act
1982.
(6) A husband and wife shall for all purposes of distribution or division
under this section be treated as 2 persons.13

(7) Where an intestate’s spouse or civil partner survives the intestate but
dies before the end of the period of 14 days beginning with the day on
which the intestate died, this section has effect as respects the intestate as
if the spouse or civil partner had not survived the intestate.14

53 The statutory trusts

[1971/26/Sch 1; P1925/23/47]
(1) Where under this Part the residuary estate of an intestate or any part of it
is directed to be held on the statutory trusts for the issue of the intestate,
it shall be held on the following trusts —
(a) In trust, in equal shares if more than one —
(i) for all or any of the child or children of the intestate who
attain the age of 18 years or marry under that age, or form
a civil partnership, under that age, and15

(ii) for all or any of the issue living at the death of the intestate,
who attain the age of 18 years or marry or form a civil
partnership under that age, of any child of the intestate
who predeceases the intestate,16

such issue to take through all degrees according to their stocks, in
equal shares if more than one, the share which their parent would
have taken if living at the death of the intestate, and so that no
issue shall take whose parent is living at the death of the intestate
and so capable of taking.
(b) The statutory power of advancement, and the statutory provisions
relating to maintenance and accumulation of surplus income,
shall apply, but when a minor marries, or forms a civil
partnership, he shall be entitled to give valid receipts for the
income of his share or interest.17

(c) Where the property held on the statutory trusts is divisible into
shares, then any money or property which has been paid by the
intestate to, or settled by him for the benefit of, a child of the
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Section 53


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 31

intestate by way of advancement or on the marriage, or formation
of the civil partnership, of the child (including any life or less
interest and any property covenanted to be paid or settled) shall,
subject to any contrary intention expressed or appearing from the
circumstances of the case, be taken as being so paid or settled in or
towards satisfaction of the share of the child or the share which he
would have taken if living at the intestate’s death, and shall be
brought into account at a valuation (reckoned as at the death of
the intestate) in accordance with the requirements of the personal
representative.18

(d) The personal representative may permit any minor contingently
interested to have the use and enjoyment of any personal chattels
in such manner and subject to such conditions (if any) as the
personal representative may consider reasonable, and without
being liable to account for any consequential loss.
(2) If the trusts in favour of the issue of the intestate fail by reason of no
child or other issue attaining an absolutely vested interest —
(a) the residuary estate of the intestate and the income of it and all
statutory accumulations (if any) of the income, or so much of
them as has not been paid or applied under any power affecting
them shall be held under the provisions of this Part as if the
intestate had died without leaving issue living at his death; and
(b) references in this Part to the intestate leaving issue, or a child or
other issue, or leaving no issue, shall be construed as references to
him leaving issue, or no issue, as the case may be, who attain an
absolutely vested interest.
(3) Where under this Part the residuary estate of an intestate or any part of it
is directed to be held on the statutory trusts for any class of relatives of
the intestate, other than issue of the intestate, it shall be held on trusts
corresponding to the statutory trusts for issue of the intestate (other than
the provisions for bringing money or property into account), as if
subsection (1), except paragraph (c), were repeated with the substitution
for references to the child or children of the intestate of references to the
member or members of that class.
(4) If the trusts in favour of any class of relatives of the intestate, other than
issue of the intestate, fail by reason of no member of that class attaining
an absolutely vested interest, the residuary estate of the intestate and the
income of it and all statutory accumulations (if any) of the income, or so
much of them as has not been paid or applied under any power affecting
them, shall by virtue of subsections (2) and (3) be held under the
provisions of this Part as if the intestate had died without leaving any
member of that class living at his death.
Section 54 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 32 AT 17 of 1990 c

54 Power to raise lump sum

[P1925/23/48(2)(a)]
The personal representative may raise the net sum or any part of it and the
interest on it payable to the surviving spouse or civil partner of the intestate
under section 52(1)(b), together with any amount properly required for the costs
of the transaction, on the security of the whole or any part of the residuary
estate of the intestate (other than the personal chattels), so far as that estate is
sufficient for the purpose and the said sum and interest have not been satisfied
by an appropriation under section 44.19

55 The matrimonial or civil partnership home

[P1952/64/5]
Schedule 1 has effect for the purpose of enabling the surviving spouse or civil
partner of an intestate to acquire the matrimonial home.20

56 Partial intestacy

[P1925/23/49]
(1) Where any person dies leaving a will effectively disposing of part of his
estate, this Part shall have effect as respects the part of his estate not so
disposed of subject to the provisions contained in his will and subject to
the modifications in subsections (2) to (4).
(2) Where the deceased leaves a spouse or civil partner who acquires a
beneficial interest under the will of the deceased (other than personal
chattels specifically bequeathed), the references in this Part to the net
sum payable to a surviving spouse or civil partner under section 52(1)(b),
and to interest on that sum, shall be taken as references to that sum
diminished by the value at the date of death of that beneficial interest
and to interest on that sum as so diminished, and accordingly, where
that value exceeds that sum, this Part shall have effect as if references to
that sum and interest on it were omitted.21

(3) The requirements of section 53(1)(c) as to bringing property into account
apply to any beneficial interests acquired by any issue of the deceased
under his will (but not to beneficial interests so acquired by anyone else).
(4) The personal representative shall, subject to his rights and powers for the
purposes of administration, be a trustee for the persons entitled under
this Part in respect of the part of the estate not expressly disposed of,
unless it appears by the will that the personal representative is intended
to take that part beneficially.
(5) The references in subsections (2) and (3) to a beneficial interest acquired
under a will include references to a beneficial interest acquired by virtue
of the exercise by the will of a general power of appointment, but not of a
special power of appointment.
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Section 57


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 33

(6) For the purposes of subsection (2) the personal representative may
employ a duly qualified valuer in any case where such employment may
be necessary.
57 Illegitimacy

[1985/10/7 and 9; P1987/42/18 (1) and (2)]
(1) Where any person dies intestate as respects any property, an illegitimate
person, and any person related to an illegitimate person, shall be entitled
to take any interest in it as if the illegitimate person had been born
legitimate.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), an illegitimate person shall be
presumed not to have been survived by his father or by any person
related to him through his father, unless the contrary is shown.
(3) A personal representative is not under a duty to enquire before making
any assent, conveyance or distribution relating to any property whether
there is a person who is or may be entitled to any interest in the property
by virtue of subsection (1), so far as it confers any interest on illegitimate
persons or their issue or on the father of, or on any person related
through the father to, an illegitimate person.
(4) A personal representative is not liable to any such person by reason of
any assent, conveyance or distribution of the property made without
regard to any such claim, if he has not received notice of that claim
before the assent, conveyance or distribution.
(5) Subsections (3) and (4) do not prejudice the rights of a person to follow
the property, or any property representing it, into the hands of another
person, other than a purchaser for money or money’s worth.
58 Legal separation

[1976/14/18(2)]
(1) If either of the parties to a marriage dies intestate as respects any
property while a legal separation is in force and the separation is
continuing, the property shall devolve as if the other party to the
marriage had then been dead.
(2) In this section —
“legal separation” means —
(a) a decree of judicial separation granted by the High Court; or
(b) a judicial separation granted by a court of civil jurisdiction in any
part of the British Islands and recognised in the Island; or
(c) a legal separation obtained in a country outside the British Islands
and recognised in the Island;
Section 59 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 34 AT 17 of 1990 c

“recognised” means entitled to be recognised by virtue of the Recognition of
Divorces etc. Act 1987.
59 Construction of documents
22

(1) References (however expressed) in any instrument inter vivos made, or
any will coming into operation, on or after the 5th July 1961, to any
Statutes of Distribution, or to the law relating to distribution on intestacy,
shall be construed as references to this Part
(2) References (however expressed) in any such instrument or will to next of
kin or statutory next of kin shall, unless the context otherwise requires,
be construed as references to the persons who would take beneficially on
an intestacy under this Part.

(3) References to this Part in subsection (1) and (2) do not include
section 57(1) and (2) in relation to an instrument inter vivos made or a
will coming into operation before the 1st January 1986, and do not
include section 52(7) in relation to an instrument inter vivos made or a
will coming into operation before the 1st July 1996.23

(4) Subject to subsection (5), where by any instrument or will referred to in
subsection (1) an interest in any property is expressed to be given to an
heir or heirs or any particular heir or class of heirs, the same person shall
take as would in the case of land have answered that description under
the common law in force before the 5th July 1961.
(5) Where the word ‘heir’ or ‘heirs’ is used in a disposition contained in any
such instrument or will executed on or after the 1 January 1986, a person
shall not be excluded from taking an interest under that disposition by
reason only that he or any person related to him was born illegitimate.
(6) Trusts declared in an instrument inter vivos made or a will coming into
operation before the 5th July 1961 by reference to the Statutes of
Distribution shall, unless a contrary intention appears, be construed as
references to the enactments (other than the Intestates’ Estates Act 1921)
relating to the distribution of effects of intestates which were in force
immediately before that date.
PART IV – MISCELLANEOUS AND SUPPLEMENTAL

60 Small payments

[1987/8/3]
(1) Subject to subsection (2), this section applies where a person dies and the
total of —
(a) any sums payable to him by another person (‘the debtor’) and
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Section 61


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 35

(b) any other sums payable to his personal representative by the
debtor,
(“the amount due”) does not exceed £1,000.
(2) This section does not apply to any such sum as is mentioned in
subsection (1) in relation to which a statutory provision other than this
section applies so as to enable the sum to be paid to a person without
production of a grant of representation.
(3) Where this section applies the debtor may, without requiring the
production of a grant of representation, pay the whole or any part of the
amount due —
(a) to the personal representative of the deceased, or
(b) to the person, or to or among any one or more of any persons,
appearing to the debtor to be beneficially entitled to the estate.
(4) A person to whom a payment is made under subsection (3) is, and the
debtor is not, liable to account for the amount paid to him.
(5) The Treasury may by order alter the amount specified in subsection (1)
(or such other amount as may for the time being be substituted therefor
by a previous order under this subsection); but no such order shall have
effect unless it is approved by Tynwald.
61 Savings

(1) Nothing in this Act affects the powers of the court existing apart from
this Act.
(2) Nothing in this Act affects any unrepealed statutory provision
dispensing with probate or administration as respects estate other than
land.
(3) Subject to any express provision of this Act or probate rules, nothing in
this Act affects any other law relating to the administration of estates.
62 Application of Act

Except as provided by Schedule 2, this Act applies to the estates of all deceased
persons, whether dying before or after the commencement of this Act, and
whether the will (if any) of the deceased was made before or after the
commencement of this Act.
63 Application to Crown

This Act binds the Crown.
64 Interpretation

(1) In this Act —
Section 64 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 36 AT 17 of 1990 c

“administration
” means letters of administration, whether general or limited, or
with the will annexed or otherwise;
“administrator
” means a person to whom administration is granted;
“conveyance
” includes a mortgage, assignment, lease, assent, vesting
declaration, vesting instrument, disclaimer, release and any other
assurance of property or of an interest therein effected by an instrument,
except a will;
“the court
” means the High Court, and includes the Chief Registrar in respect of
any functions conferred on him by this Act or probate rules;
“disposition
” includes a conveyance, and any gift or appointment of property
contained in a will;
“estate
” means real and personal estate;
“gift
” includes a devise and a bequest;
“income
” includes rents and profits;
“intestate
” includes a person who leaves a will but dies intestate as to some
beneficial interest in his estate;
“mortgage
” includes a bond and security;
“non-contentious or common form probate business
” means the business of
obtaining probate and administration where there is no contention as to
the right thereto, including —
(a) the passing of probates and administration through the High
Court in contentious cases where the contest has been terminated;
(b) all business of a non-contentious nature in matters of testacy and
intestacy not being proceedings in any action; and
(c) the business of lodging caveats against the grant of probate or
administration;24

“pecuniary legacy
” includes an annuity, a general legacy, a demonstrative
legacy so far as it is not discharged out of the designated property, and
any other general direction by a testator for the payment of money;
“personal chattels
” means motor cars (not used for business purposes), garden
effects, domestic animals, plate, plated articles, linen, china, glass, books,
pictures, prints, furniture, jewellery, articles of household or personal use
or ornament, musical and scientific instruments and apparatus, wines,
liquors and consumable stores, but does not include —
(a) any chattels used at the death of the testator for business
purposes, or
(b) money or securities for money;
“personal representative
” means the executor, original or by representation, or
administrator for the time being of a deceased person;
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Section 65


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 37

“possession
” includes the receipt of rents and profits or the right to receive
them;
“prescribed
” means prescribed by rules of court or probate rules;
“probate
” means probate of a will;
“probate rules
” means rules under section 9;
“property
” means real or personal property, and includes things in action and
any interest in property;
“purchaser
” means a purchaser, lessee, mortgagee or other person who in good
faith acquires an interest in property for valuable consideration, and also
an intending purchaser;
“representation
” means the probate of a will and administration, and “taking

out representation
” means obtaining probate or administration;
“rent
” includes rents of every description, and any other periodical payment in
money or money’s worth issuing out of or charged on land, except
mortgage interest;
“the residuary estate of the intestate
” has the meaning given by section 42(5);
“the statutory trusts
” means the trusts declared by section 53;
“securities
” includes stocks, funds and shares;
“trust for sale
” means an immediate binding trust for sale, whether or not
exercisable at the request or with the consent of any person, and with or
without power to postpone sale;
“valuable consideration
” includes marriage, and the formation of a civil
partnership, but does not include a nominal consideration in money;25

“will
” includes a codicil.
(2) References to a child or issue living at the death of any person include a
child or issue in its mother’s womb at the death.
(3) References to the estate of a deceased person include property over
which the deceased exercised a general power of appointment by his
will.
(4) A will or codicil executed before any date shall not be treated for the
purposes of this Act as made on or after that date by reason only that it is
confirmed by a codicil executed on or after that date.
65 Transitional provisions, amendments and repeals

(1) The transitional provisions in Schedule 3 shall have effect.
(2) The enactments specified in Schedule 4 are amended in accordance with
that Schedule.
Section 66 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 38 AT 17 of 1990 c

(3) The enactments specified in Schedule 5 are repealed to the extent
specified in column 3 of that Schedule.
66 Short title and commencement

This Act may be cited as the Administration of Estates Act 1990, and shall come
into operation on the expiration of the period of 3 months beginning with the
day on which it is passed.
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Schedule 1


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 39

SCHEDULE 1

RIGHTS OF SURVIVING SPOUSE OR CIVIL PARTNER AS

RESPECTS MATRIMONIAL OR CIVIL PARTNERSHIP HOME
26

Section 55
Right to require appropriation of home
1. (1) Subject to the provisions of this Schedule, where the residuary estate of
the intestate comprises an interest in a dwellinghouse in which the surviving spouse or
civil partner was resident at the time of the intestate’s death, the surviving spouse or
civil partner may require the personal representative in exercise of the power conferred
by section 44 (and with due regard to the requirements of that section as to valuation)
to appropriate the said interest in the dwellinghouse in or towards satisfaction of any
absolute interest of the surviving spouse or civil partner in the estate of the intestate.27

(2) The right conferred by this paragraph shall not be exercisable where the
interest is —
(a) a tenancy which at the date of the death of the intestate was a
tenancy which would determine within 2 years from that date; or
(b) a tenancy which the landlord by notice given after that date could
determine within the remainder of that period.
(3) Nothing in section 44(6) prevents the personal representative giving
effect to the right conferred by this paragraph.
(4) Where part of a building was, at the date of the death of the intestate,
occupied as a separate dwelling, that dwelling shall, for the purposes of this Schedule,
be treated as a dwellinghouse.
Consent of court in certain cases
2. Where —
(a) the dwellinghouse forms part of a building and an interest in the
whole of the building is comprised in the residuary estate; or
(b) the dwellinghouse is held with agricultural land and an interest in
the agricultural land is comprised in the residuary estate; or
(c) the whole or part of the dwellinghouse was at the time of the
intestate’s death used as a hotel or lodging house; or
(d) a part of the dwellinghouse was at the time of the intestate’s death
used for purposes other than domestic purposes,
the right conferred in paragraph 1 shall not be exercisable unless the court so orders,
on being satisfied that the exercise of that right is not likely to diminish the value of the
Schedule 1 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 40 AT 17 of 1990 c

assets in the residuary estate (other than the said interest in the dwellinghouse) or
make them more difficult to dispose of.
Exercise of right
3. (1) Unless the surviving spouse or civil partner is the sole personal
representative, the right conferred by this paragraph shall be exercisable by notifying
the personal representative (or, where there are 2 or more personal representatives of
whom one is the surviving spouse or civil partner, all of them except the surviving
spouse or civil partner) in writing.28

(2) A notification under sub-paragraph (1) shall not be revocable except with
the consent of the personal representative; but the surviving spouse or civil partner
may require the personal representative to have the said interest in the dwellinghouse
valued in accordance with section 44 and to inform him or her of the result of the
valuation before he or she decides whether to exercise that right.29

(3) Subject to sub-paragraph (4), the right conferred by paragraph 1 shall not
be exercisable after —
(a) the expiration of 12 months from the first taking out of
representation with respect to the intestate’s estate;
(b) the death of the surviving spouse or civil partner.30

(4) The court may extend the period of 12 months mentioned in sub-
paragraph (3)(a) if the surviving spouse or civil partner satisfies the court that the
limitation to the said period will operate unfairly in consequence of —
(a) the representation first taken out in the Island being probate of a
will subsequently revoked on the ground that the will was
invalid; or
(b) a question whether a person had an interest in the estate, or as to
the nature of an interest in the estate, not having been determined
at the time when representation was first taken out in the
Island; or
(c) some other circumstances affecting the administration or
distribution of the estate.31

(5) In considering for the purposes of this paragraph when representation
was first taken out, a grant limited to real estate or to personal estate shall be left out of
account unless a grant limited to the remainder of the estate has previously been made
or is made at the same time.
Restriction on disposal within 12 months of death
4. (1) During the period of 12 months mentioned in paragraph 3(3)(a), the
personal representative shall not without the written consent of the surviving spouse
or civil partner sell or otherwise dispose of the said interest in the dwellinghouse
except in the course of administration owing to want of other assets.32

Administration of Estates Act 1990 Schedule 1


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 41

(2) An application to the court under paragraph 2 may be made by the
personal representative as well as by the surviving spouse or civil partner, and if, on an
application under that paragraph, the court does not order that the right conferred by
paragraph 1 shall be exercisable by the surviving spouse or civil partner, the court may
authorise the personal representatives to dispose of the said interest in the
dwellinghouse within the said period of 12 months.33

(3) Where the court extends the said period of 12 months under
paragraph 3(4), the court may direct that this paragraph shall apply in relation to the
extended period as it applied in relation to the original period of 12 months.
(4) This paragraph does not apply where the surviving spouse or civil
partner is the sole personal representative or one of 2 or more personal
representatives.34

(5) Nothing in this paragraph confers any right on the surviving spouse or
civil partner as against a purchaser from the personal representative.35

Supplemental provisions
5. (1) Where the surviving spouse or civil partner is one of 2 or more personal
representatives, the rule that a trustee may not be a purchaser of trust property shall
not prevent the surviving spouse or civil partner from purchasing out of the estate of
the intestate an interest in a dwellinghouse in which the surviving spouse or civil
partner was resident at the time of the intestate’s death.36

(2) The power of appropriation under section 44 includes power to
appropriate an interest in a dwellinghouse in which the surviving spouse or civil
partner was resident at the time of the intestate’s death partly in satisfaction of an
interest of the surviving spouse or civil partner in the estate of the intestate and partly
in return for a payment of money by the surviving spouse or civil partner to the
personal representative.37

Persons under disability
6. (1) Where the surviving spouse or civil partner is a person suffering from
mental disorder within the meaning of the Mental Health Act 1974, a requirement or
consent under this Schedule may be made or given on his or her behalf by the receiver
or, where there is no receiver, by the court.38

(2) In the case of a surviving spouse or civil partner who is a minor —
(a) a requirement or consent made or given under this Schedule shall
be as valid and binding as if he or she were of full age; and
(b) section 45 does not apply as respects an appropriation in
pursuance of paragraph 1.39

Schedule 1 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 42 AT 17 of 1990 c

Interpretation
7. References in this Schedule to a dwellinghouse include references to any garden
or portion of ground attached to and usually occupied with the dwellinghouse or
otherwise required for the amenity or convenience of the dwellinghouse.


Administration of Estates Act 1990 Schedule 2


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 43

SCHEDULE 2

[Section 62]
DEATHS BEFORE COMMENCEMENT ETC.

Number of personal representatives
1. (1) Section 4 does not apply to a grant of administration made before the 5th
July 1961.
(2) Section 4(1) and (2) does not apply to a grant of probate made before the
commencement of this Act.
(3) Where probate has been granted before the commencement of this Act
with power reserved to another executor or executors to prove, double probate shall
not be granted so that the number of executors entitled to act exceeds 4.
Grant to trust corporation
2. Section 5(3) does not affect a grant to a syndic of a trust corporation made before
the 5th July 1961.
Vesting of estate pending grant
3. In relation to the estate of a person dying before the 1st January 1986, for
section 20 there is substituted the following —
“20

(1) Where a person dies wholly intestate his estate shall vest in the
Treasury until administration is granted in respect of it.
(2) Where a person dies testate but the will does not appoint an
executor, or if no executor appointed is willing or able to apply for
a grant of probate, the personal estate of the deceased shall vest in
the Treasury until a grant of representation is made in respect of
it.”.
Guarantee
4. Section 21 does not apply in relation to administration granted before the 1st
October 1988.
Administration of estates
5. Part II, except sections 44, 45, 46(5) and 47, does not apply in relation to the
estate of a person dying before the 5th July 1961, and the rules of law applicable before
that date to the administration of a deceased person’s estate continue to apply thereto.
Schedule 2 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 44 AT 17 of 1990 c

Vesting of property in personal representative
6. Section 36 does not apply in relation to land the subject of a gift by will of a
person dying before the 1st January 1986, but without prejudice to the power of a
personal representative to convey any such land for the purpose of giving effect to a
contract subsisting at the death of the deceased.
Minority
7. In relation to a beneficiary under a will made before the 1st April 1972 or on the
death of a person intestate before that date, the reference to minority in sections 38(1)
and 42(4) shall be construed without regard to section 1 (reduction of age of majority to
18) of the Family Law Reform (Isle of Man) Act 1971.
Assents and conveyances
8. Sections 46(1) and 47(2) and (4) do not apply to the estate of a person dying
testate before the 1st January 1986.
Distribution on intestacy
9. (1) Part III does not apply to the estate of a person dying before the 5th July
1961, and the rules of descent of real property, and the statutory rules applicable to the
distribution of personal property, which had effect before that date continue to apply
thereto.
(2) Part III applies to the estate of a person dying on or after the 5th July
1961 but before the commencement of this Act subject to the following modifications —
(a) for amount of the net sum and the rate of interest specified in
section 52(1)(b) there are substituted the corresponding amount
and rate specified in or having effect under section 45 of the
Administration of Estates Act 1960, as it had effect at the time of
death;
(b) in the case of a person dying before the 1st April 1972 —
(i) in section 53(1)(a), for “18 years” there is substituted “21
years”; and
(ii) in relation to the application, by virtue of section 53(1)(b),
of section 31 (maintenance during minority) of the Trustee
Act 1961, the effect of section 1 (reduction of age of
majority to 18) of the Family Law Reform (Isle of Man) Act
1971 shall be disregarded;
(c) in the case of a person dying before the 21st August 1972,
section 58 does not apply, and section 22(1)(a) and (2) (wife’s
property in case of judicial separation) of the Judicature
(Matrimonial Causes) Act 1965 continues to apply in such a case;
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Schedule 2


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 45

(d) in the case of a person dying before the 15th May 1973, sub-
paragraphs (vi) and (vii) of section 52(1)(f) are omitted;
(e) in the case of a person dying before the 1st January 1986,
section 57 is omitted;
(f) [Repealed]40

(g) in the case of a person dying before the commencement of this
Act, section 56(3) is omitted;
(h) in the case of a person dying before the 1st July 1996, section 52(7)
is omitted.41

(3) Where by virtue of sub-paragraph (2)(b) trustees may under section 31(1)
of the Trustee Act 1961 pay income to the parent or guardian of a person who has
attained the age of 18, or apply it for or towards his maintenance, education or benefit,
they may also pay it to that person himself.
Illegitimacy
10. (1) Where, on or after the 11th June 1928 and before the 1st January 1986, the
mother of an illegitimate person died intestate as to any estate, and left no legitimate
issue surviving her, that person or, if he is dead, his issue shall be entitled to take any
interest therein to which he or his issue would have been entitled if he had been born
legitimate.
(2) Where, on or after the 11th June 1928 and before the 1st January 1986, an
illegitimate person died intestate as respects any estate, his mother if surviving shall be
entitled to take any interest therein to which she would have been entitled if he had
been born legitimate and she had been the only surviving parent.
(3) In this paragraph “illegitimate person” does not include a legitimated
person.
Personal chattels
11. In relation to the estate of a person dying before the commencement of this Act,
in this Act “personal chattels
” includes carriages, horses and stable furniture and
effects not used for business purposes.


Schedule 3 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 46 AT 17 of 1990 c

SCHEDULE 3

[Section 65(1)]
TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS

Grants under repealed provisions
1. Nothing in the repeals made by this Act affects —
(a) any grant made before the commencement of this Act under
section 17 or 19 of the Administration of Estates Act 1960, or
(b) the continued operation of subsection (2) and (3) of the said
section 17 in relation to a grant made under that section.
Administration bonds
2. Any administration bond given before the 1st October 1988 under section 17 of
the Ecclesiastical Civil Judicature Transfer Act 1884 may be enforced and assigned as if
this Act and the Administration of Estates Act 1987 had not been passed.
Remuneration
3. A grant of administration made before the commencement of this Act shall be
deemed to include provision under section 33 entitling the administrators to
remuneration equal to the following proportion of the estate passing through their
hands, namely 5 per cent. of the first £100 and 21/2 per cent of the residue.
Interest on surviving spouse’s net sum
4. Until an order is made by the Treasury under sub-paragraph (ii) of
section 52(1)(b) the rate of interest for the purpose of that sub-paragraph shall be 9 per
cent per annum.
Legal separations
5. A provision in force under an order made or having effect as if made under
section 2(1)(a) of the Matrimonial Proceedings (Magistrates’ Courts) Act 1962
exempting one party to a marriage from the obligation to cohabit with the other shall
not have effect as a legal separation for the purposes of section 58.
Trust corporations
6. A corporation which immediately before the commencement of this Act was
approved under the Judicature Amendment Act 1935 shall be deemed to be approved
by the High Court for the purpose of section 65A of the Trustee Act 1961.
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Schedule 3


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 47

Saving for repealed provisions
7. (1) The repeal by this Act of the Administration of Estates Act 1960 does not
affect —
(a) any obligation arising under section 13(4) of that Act, or
(b) any right in the nature of dower preserved by section 44(1) of that
Act.
(2) The repeal by this Act of the Administration of Estates Act 1987 does not
affect the amendments of the Industrial and Building Societies Act 1892 made by
section 4(1) of that Act.


Schedule 4 Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 48 AT 17 of 1990 c

SCHEDULE 4

[Section 65(2)]
AMENDMENT OF ENACTMENTS

[Sch 4 amends the following Acts —
Trustee Act 1961 q.v.
Redundancy Payments Act 1990 q.v.]


Administration of Estates Act 1990 Schedule 5


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 49

SCHEDULE 5

ENACTMENTS REPEALED

Section 65(3)
[Sch 5 repeals the following Acts and Order wholly —
Judicature Amendment Act 1935
Administration of Estates Act 1960
Administration of Estates Act 1961
Administration of Estates Act 1973
Usury Acts (Repeal) Act 1979
Administration of Estates Act 1987
Administration of Estates (Variation) Order 1987 (GC210/87)
and the following Acts and Orders in part —
Settled Land Act 1891
Trustee Act 1961
Conveyancing Act 1963
Family Law Reform (Isle of Man) Act 1971
Inheritance (Provision for Family and Dependants) Act 1982
Settled Land Act 1983
Conveyancing Act 1985
Legitimacy Act 1985
Treasury Act 1985
Transfer of Functions (Treasury) (No. 2) Order 1986 (GC191/86)
Powers of Attorney Act 1987
Transfer of Functions (Governor in Council) Order 1988 (GC55/88).]
Administration of Estates Act 1990 Endnotes


c AT 17 of 1990 Page 51

ENDNOTES

Table of Legislation History

Legislation Year and No Commencement






Table of Renumbered Provisions

Original Current






Table of Endnote References

1
S 1 repealed by High Court Act 1991 Sch 5. 2
Subs (1A) inserted by Trustee Act 2001 Sch 2. 3
Subs (4) amended by Trustee Act 2001 Sch 2. 4
Subs (2) amended by Mental Health Act 1998 Sch 5. 5
Para (a) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 14. 6
Subpara (i) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 14. 7
Subpara (ii) amended by Statute Law Revision Act 1992 Sch 1 (words ‘from the date
of death’ operative 10/10/1990), by SD94/10 (net sum) with effect from 22/3/2010 and by
Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 14. See SD74/94 as to prescribed rate of interest. 8
Para (b) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 14. Subpara (iii) amended by
Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 14. 9
Para (c) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 14. 10
Para (d) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 14. 11
Para (e) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 14. 12
Para (f) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 14. 13
Subs (6) not amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 as no presumption in law that
civil partners are not 2 people. 14
Subs (7) added by Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1996 s 5 and amended
by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 14. 15
Subpara (i) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 16
Subpara (ii) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 17
Para (b) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 18
Para (c) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4.
Endnotes Administration of Estates Act 1990


Page 52 AT 17 of 1990 c

19
S 54 amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 14. 20
S 55 amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Schs 4 and 14. 21
Subs (2) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 14. 22
1985/10/8(2) 23
Subs (3) amended by Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1996 s 5. 24
Definition of ‘non-contentious or common form probate business’ inserted by
Administration of Justice Act 2008 Sch 2. 25
Definition of ‘valuable consideration’ amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 26
Heading to Sch 1 amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 27
Subpara (1) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 28
Subpara (1) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 29
Subpara (2) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 30
Item (b) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 31
Subpara (4) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 32
Subpara (1) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 33
Subpara (2) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 34
Subpara (4) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 35
Subpara (5) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 36
Subpara (1) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 37
Subpara (2) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 38
Subpara (1) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 39
Subpara (2) amended by Civil Partnership Act 2011 Sch 4. 40
Item (f) repealed by SD29/03. 41
Item (h) added by Law Reform (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1996 s 5.