The Florida Probate Administration is court
supervised process that is dedicated to marshalling (gathering) a deceased
person’s (decedent’s) assets, and debts, appointing a Personal Representative
(Also referred to as an Executor or Executrix) to manage the
administration of the estate assets, paying verified debts/creditors, and then
finally distributing the remaining assets.
PROBATE DEFINED - TESTATE OR INTESTATE
Probate administration transfers
legal title of property owned by the decedent from the estate of the decedent
to his or her proper beneficiaries as determined by a Last Will and Testament
(A person dies with a Will, dies Testate). If a person dies without
a Will dies Intestate. When a person dies without a Last Will and Testament
Florida laws of intestate succession outline how assets are to be
distributed. If there is a surviving spouse, a surviving spouse has certain
automatic rights to receive a part of the decedent’s assets referred to as
Florida Homestead law and Florida Spousal Elective Share Statute.
PROPERTY SUBJECT TO PROBATE
Property subject to probate administration are
only those assets owned in the decedent’s name alone which does not pass to
others by operation of law. Jointly held property, paid on death bank
accounts, life insurance policies designating beneficiaries other than the
estate, retirement accounts that name a beneficiary and brokerage accounts
naming beneficiaries other than the estate.
PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE ESTATE
Florida probate law allows an individual or
company may serve as a Personal Representative. If the Personal Representative
is an individual, Florida probate law dictates that the individual, if not a
Florida resident must be a lineal descendant of the deceased person (spouse,
child, grandchild, mother, father, grandparents, aunts uncles, niece) or a
Florida resident if the personal representative is an individual. Florida
Probate law defines who has priority in being appointed as Personal
Representative.
The Personal Representative files and inventory
of estate assets sees that all necessary tax returns are filed. A final IRS
Form 1040 income tax return for the decedent or an IRS Form 1041 estate tax
return, and an IRS Form 706 may have to be filed for estate’s valued in excess
of the Federal Estate tax exemption amount on the date of the deceased
person’s death ($2,000,000 in 2008).
CREDITORS
The probate administration process also addresses
verification and payment of outstanding debts of the deceased person and of
the estate. Creditors who are known or reasonably known must file a claim
against the estate. The creditors have 3 months after the first date the
Personal Representative publishes a notice to creditors in the County where
the deceased person lived. If a creditor does not file a claim in the probate
court within that time period that creditor’s claim is not verified, and the
debt is barred (the debt is no longer considered valid or enforceable against
the estate). If a claim’s validity or accuracy filed in the probate court is
questioned by the Personal Representative, the Personal Representative can
file an objection to that claim. This requires the creditor to prove the debt
or file a lawsuit to collect on that debt. If there is enough money in the
estate to pay all of the valid creditor claims filed in the probate court and
the claims are not objected to by the Personal Representative, these valid
claims are paid from the remaining estate assets available after legal fees,
probate administration costs, funeral costs, medical costs of last illness,
and personal representative fees are paid. If there is not sufficient money in
the estate to pay those expenses outlined in the previous sentence and all of
the valid claims filed, Florida probate law defines a priority order for which
creditors will receive the remaining estate property first.
Once the legally enforceable debts have been paid
and the taxes and other fees paid, then the net remaining estate assets are
distribution to the beneficiaries or heirs of the deceased person.
FINAL ACCOUNTING AND DISTRIBUTION OF ASSETS
As part of the Florida probate closing process,
the Personal Representative prepares a final accounting, petition for
discharge and petition for distribution is typically completed and served on
all interested parties. Florida law indicates a Probate must be closed within
12 months of the estate being opened by the court.
The Florida Probate process outlined above is for
an uncontested Florida Probate Estate Administration matter. The Florida
probate process can be delayed when there is a Will Contest or objection to
appointment of the Personal Representative. This would require Florida Probate
Litigation subject to all the Florida Rules of Civil Procedure and discovery.
A Florida probate Litigator would be required to assist with contested
litigation issues related to contested Wills and probates.