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The outside party are my two uncles. They were left out of their parent's trust/will. They thought they were each getting a home. Instead, one home is going to a grandson and the other is going to a great-granddaughter. Initially when my grandparents created their trust in 1992, both of my uncles were getting a home. But then an amendment in 1994 removed one uncle and another in 2002 removed the other uncle as beneficiaries to these two homes. My grandfather passed away in '95 and my grandmother just passed away two weeks ago. Our family lawyer sent out a copy of the will to everybody. They are unhappy, but again, are not beneficiaries in the most recent trust/will from 2002. Do they have any right to contest or can they even contest?

2007-11-01 17:17:48 · 2 answers · asked by elcampeon17 1 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

2 answers

You can contest anything, but if the documents are in order, they are wasting their money.

2007-11-01 17:26:11 · answer #1 · answered by cattbarf 7 · 0 0

As long as you can afford it, you can contest. I can't see any way of them winning the contast though.

2007-11-01 17:48:54 · answer #2 · answered by sensible_man 7 · 0 0

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