Succession requires law to determine who inherits property when someone dies; without law, all property would go to the state. A will can only dispose of half of a person's property, with the other half going to heirs if it was acquired after the will was created, unless the will contains a clause giving away all property owned at death. Requirements for the legal form of wills have not changed between 1950 and 2020.
Succession requires law to determine who inherits property when someone dies; without law, all property would go to the state. A will can only dispose of half of a person's property, with the other half going to heirs if it was acquired after the will was created, unless the will contains a clause giving away all property owned at death. Requirements for the legal form of wills have not changed between 1950 and 2020.
Succession requires law to determine who inherits property when someone dies; without law, all property would go to the state. A will can only dispose of half of a person's property, with the other half going to heirs if it was acquired after the will was created, unless the will contains a clause giving away all property owned at death. Requirements for the legal form of wills have not changed between 1950 and 2020.
If there is no law, there is no succession. No law, property would belong to the state.
Succession is a privilege Latent: appears valid
Patent: on its face
=art 793. Will only disposes ½ of property. The other ½ if acquired after the will. Unless there is no clause that you dispose everything at time of death. (usually at creation of will)
1950-2020 requirement as to form in wills have not changed.