Personally I’ve emailed my will to all interested parties so they have plenty of time to object.
the will only gets so far. for example there have been cases where children of a family have completely abandoned their parent/s, and a 3rd part good samaritan came along to help said person for years before their eventual death, and the will gave the inheritance to the good Samaritan, which causes the blood children to object.
the only clearcut way is to have the parties in attendance while the will is being written so that any objections wpuld get aired out while said person is alive and can make the call
DavidDoesLemmy@aussie.zone 21 hours ago
FreedomAdvocate@lemmy.net.au 14 hours ago
That doesn’t change anything though. They can still challenge the will when you die.
FreedomAdvocate@lemmy.net.au 14 hours ago
You don’t need everyone present while the will is being written though. That changes nothing. People can object all they want, but if the will is done correctly the objecting and challenging is pointless and just wastes money.
Why is it so hard for people to accept a dying persons wishes? If they want all their money to be donated to the first homeless person that walks past the closest bus stop to their house, that’s what needs to be done. No one is owed an inheritance.