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West Virginia Mutual Wills Package with Last Wills and Testaments for Married Couple with Minor Children
The Mutual Wills package with Last Wills and Testaments you have found is for a married couple with adult children. It provides for the appointment of a personal representative or executor, designation of who will receive your property and other provisions, including provisions for your spouse and children. This package contains two wills, one for each spouse. It also includes instructions.
The wills must be signed in the presence of two witnesses, not related to you or named in the wills. If your state has adopted a self-proving affidavit statute, a state specific self-proving affidavit is also included and requires the presence of a notary public to sign the wills.
Law Summary - West Virginia Mutual Wills Package with Last Wills and Testaments for Married Couple with Minor Children
Note: This summary is not intended to be an all-inclusive discussion of the law of wills in West Virginia, but does contain basic and other information. This summary does not include a discussion of handwritten wills. Who may make will: Every person 18 years of age or older and of sound mind, may make a will. 41-1-1.
Who may not make will: No person of unsound mind, or under the age of eighteen years, shall be capable of making a will. 41-1-2.
Execution and witnesses No will shall be valid unless it be in writing and signed by the testator. The signature shall be made by him in the presence of at least two competent witnesses, present at the same time; and such witnesses shall subscribe the will in the presence of the testator, and of each other, but no form of attestation shall be necessary. 41-1-3.
Revocation by divorce; no revocation by other changes of circumstances: If after executing a will the testator is divorced or his marriage annulled, the divorce or annulment revokes any disposition or appointment of property made by the will to the former spouse, any provision conferring a general or special power of appointment on the former spouse, and any nomination of the former spouse as executor, trustee, conservator, or guardian, unless the will expressly provides otherwise. 41-1-6.
Revocation generally: A will or codicil may be revoked by a subsequent will or codicil, or by some writing declaring an intention to revoke the same, and executed in the manner in which a will is required to be executed. A will may also be revoked by the testator, or some person in his presence and by his direction, cutting, tearing, burning, obliterating, canceling or destroying the same, or the signature thereto, with the intent to revoke. 41-1-7.
Competency of witnesses who are beneficiaries: If a will is witnessed by a person who is also to receive property under the will, the will is not invalid. However, the provision in the will to that witness, or his or her spouse, shall be void except to the extent that the witness would have received the property by intestate succession laws. 41-2-1.
Creditors may be witnesses: A creditor is not prohibited from being a witness for or against the will. 41-2-2.
Executor may be witness: An executor of a will is not prohibited from being a witness for or against the will. 41-2-3.
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