When people write their own wills without the assistance of attorneys, they often forget important steps and risk having their will invalidated. Such is the case with the will of one man from Minnesota.
Gary Kruger was very close to his cousin. The two shared a birthday and referred to each other as soul mates. Despite living in different states, the two talked often and traveled together.
Three years before passing away, Kruger made out a handwritten will that left his home and checking account to his cousin. He went to the bank and had the will notarized. What Kruger intended for his assets after he passed away seemed clear. However, his cousin did not receive the home or checking account. Instead, Kruger’s nieces split the assets between themselves.
Kruger’s handwritten will was invalidated because under Minnesota law, a will must be witnessed by two people. The notary counted as one witness. There was not a second witness to Kruger’s will. As he had no living parents, siblings or children by law his estate went to the nieces.
CBS Minnesota reported this story in “Missing a Signature, Minneapolis Man's Last Will Invalidated.”
While many states will accept these handwritten wills and forgive some technical flaws in their execution, Minnesota will not do so. This illustrates the danger of not hiring an estate planning attorney to draft your will. An estate planning attorney would have known that the law required two witnesses to the will. A notary public may not know that, which appears to have happened in this case.
By writing his own will Kruger may have saved some money at the time, but it came at the cost of not being able to have his final wishes obeyed.
Reference: CBS Minnesota (September 22, 2015) “Missing a Signature, Minneapolis Man's Last Will Invalidated.”
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