SECTION 2-603. ANTILAPSE; DECEASED DEVISEE; CLASS GIFTS. Uniform Probate code
(a) [Definitions.] In this section:
(1) “Alternative devise” means a devise that is expressly created by the will and,
under the terms of the will, can take effect instead of another devise on the happening of one or more events, including survival of the testator or failure to survive the testator, whether an event is expressed in condition-precedent, condition-subsequent, or any other form. A residuary clause constitutes an alternative devise with respect to a nonresiduary devise only if the will specifically provides that, upon lapse or failure, the nonresiduary devise, or nonresiduary devises in general, pass under the residuary clause.
(2) “Class member” includes an individual who fails to survive the testator but who would have taken under a devise in the form of a class gift had he [or she] survived the testator.
(3) “Descendant of a grandparent”, as used in subsection (b), means an individual who qualifies as a descendant of a grandparent of the testator or of the donor of a power of
(a) [Definitions.] In this section:
(1) “Alternative devise” means a devise that is expressly created by the will and,
under the terms of the will, can take effect instead of another devise on the happening of one or more events, including survival of the testator or failure to survive the testator, whether an event is expressed in condition-precedent, condition-subsequent, or any other form. A residuary clause constitutes an alternative devise with respect to a nonresiduary devise only if the will specifically provides that, upon lapse or failure, the nonresiduary devise, or nonresiduary devises in general, pass under the residuary clause.
(2) “Class member” includes an individual who fails to survive the testator but who would have taken under a devise in the form of a class gift had he [or she] survived the testator.
(3) “Descendant of a grandparent”, as used in subsection (b), means an individual who qualifies as a descendant of a grandparent of the testator or of the donor of a power of
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appointment under the (i) rules of construction applicable to a class gift created in the testator’s
will if the devise or exercise of the power is in the form of a class gift or (ii) rules for intestate
succession if the devise or exercise of the power is not in the form of a class gift.
(4) “Descendants”, as used in the phrase “surviving descendants” of a deceased devisee or class member in subsections (b)(1) and (2), mean the descendants of a deceased devisee or class member who would take under a class gift created in the testator’s will.
(5) “Devise” includes an alternative devise, a devise in the form of a class gift, and an exercise of a power of appointment.
(6) “Devisee” includes (i) a class member if the devise is in the form of a class gift, (ii) an individual or class member who was deceased at the time the testator executed his [or her] will as well as an individual or class member who was then living but who failed to survive the testator, and (iii) an appointee under a power of appointment exercised by the testator’s will.
(7) “Stepchild” means a child of the surviving, deceased, or former spouse of the testator or of the donor of a power of appointment, and not of the testator or donor.
(8) “Surviving”, in the phrase “surviving devisees” or “surviving descendants”, means devisees or descendants who neither predeceased the testator nor are deemed to have predeceased the testator under Section 2-702.
(9) “Testator” includes the donee of a power of appointment if the power is exercised in the testator’s will.
(b) [Substitute Gift.] If a devisee fails to survive the testator and is a grandparent, a descendant of a grandparent, or a stepchild of either the testator or the donor of a power of appointment exercised by the testator’s will, the following apply:
(1) Except as provided in paragraph (4), if the devise is not in the form of a class
(4) “Descendants”, as used in the phrase “surviving descendants” of a deceased devisee or class member in subsections (b)(1) and (2), mean the descendants of a deceased devisee or class member who would take under a class gift created in the testator’s will.
(5) “Devise” includes an alternative devise, a devise in the form of a class gift, and an exercise of a power of appointment.
(6) “Devisee” includes (i) a class member if the devise is in the form of a class gift, (ii) an individual or class member who was deceased at the time the testator executed his [or her] will as well as an individual or class member who was then living but who failed to survive the testator, and (iii) an appointee under a power of appointment exercised by the testator’s will.
(7) “Stepchild” means a child of the surviving, deceased, or former spouse of the testator or of the donor of a power of appointment, and not of the testator or donor.
(8) “Surviving”, in the phrase “surviving devisees” or “surviving descendants”, means devisees or descendants who neither predeceased the testator nor are deemed to have predeceased the testator under Section 2-702.
(9) “Testator” includes the donee of a power of appointment if the power is exercised in the testator’s will.
(b) [Substitute Gift.] If a devisee fails to survive the testator and is a grandparent, a descendant of a grandparent, or a stepchild of either the testator or the donor of a power of appointment exercised by the testator’s will, the following apply:
(1) Except as provided in paragraph (4), if the devise is not in the form of a class
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gift and the deceased devisee leaves surviving descendants, a substitute gift is created in the
devisee’s surviving descendants. They take by representation the property to which the devisee
would have been entitled had the devisee survived the testator.
(2) Except as provided in paragraph (4), if the devise is in the form of a class gift, other than a devise to “issue,” “descendants,” “heirs of the body,” “heirs,” “next of kin,” “relatives,” or “family,” or a class described by language of similar import, a substitute gift is created in the surviving descendants of any deceased devisee. The property to which the devisees would have been entitled had all of them survived the testator passes to the surviving devisees and the surviving descendants of the deceased devisees. Each surviving devisee takes the share to which he [or she] would have been entitled had the deceased devisees survived the testator. Each deceased devisee’s surviving descendants who are substituted for the deceased devisee take by representation the share to which the deceased devisee would have been entitled had the deceased devisee survived the testator. For the purposes of this paragraph, “deceased devisee” means a class member who failed to survive the testator and left one or more surviving descendants.
(3) For the purposes of Section 2-601, words of survivorship, such as in a devise to an individual “if he survives me,” or in a devise to “my surviving children,” are not, in the absence of additional evidence, a sufficient indication of an intent contrary to the application of this section.
(4) If the will creates an alternative devise with respect to a devise for which a substitute gift is created by paragraph (1) or (2), the substitute gift is superseded by the alternative devise if:
(A) the alternative devise is in the form of a class gift and one or more
(2) Except as provided in paragraph (4), if the devise is in the form of a class gift, other than a devise to “issue,” “descendants,” “heirs of the body,” “heirs,” “next of kin,” “relatives,” or “family,” or a class described by language of similar import, a substitute gift is created in the surviving descendants of any deceased devisee. The property to which the devisees would have been entitled had all of them survived the testator passes to the surviving devisees and the surviving descendants of the deceased devisees. Each surviving devisee takes the share to which he [or she] would have been entitled had the deceased devisees survived the testator. Each deceased devisee’s surviving descendants who are substituted for the deceased devisee take by representation the share to which the deceased devisee would have been entitled had the deceased devisee survived the testator. For the purposes of this paragraph, “deceased devisee” means a class member who failed to survive the testator and left one or more surviving descendants.
(3) For the purposes of Section 2-601, words of survivorship, such as in a devise to an individual “if he survives me,” or in a devise to “my surviving children,” are not, in the absence of additional evidence, a sufficient indication of an intent contrary to the application of this section.
(4) If the will creates an alternative devise with respect to a devise for which a substitute gift is created by paragraph (1) or (2), the substitute gift is superseded by the alternative devise if:
(A) the alternative devise is in the form of a class gift and one or more
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members of the class is entitled to take under the will; or
(B) the alternative devise is not in the form of a class gift and the
expressly designated devisee of the alternative devise is entitled to take under the will.
(5) Unless the language creating a power of appointment expressly excludes the
substitution of the descendants of an appointee for the appointee, a surviving descendant of a deceased appointee of a power of appointment can be substituted for the appointee under this section, whether or not the descendant is an object of the power.
(c) [More Than One Substitute Gift; Which One Takes.] If, under subsection (b), substitute gifts are created and not superseded with respect to more than one devise and the devises are alternative devises, one to the other, the determination of which of the substitute gifts takes effect is resolved as follows:
(1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), the devised property passes under the primary substitute gift.
(2) If there is a younger-generation devise, the devised property passes under the younger-generation substitute gift and not under the primary substitute gift.
(3) In this subsection:
(A) “Primary devise” means the devise that would have taken effect had
all the deceased devisees of the alternative devises who left surviving descendants survived the testator.
(B) “Primary substitute gift” means the substitute gift created with respect
to the primary devise.
(C) “Younger-generation devise” means a devise that (i) is to a descendant of a devisee of the primary devise, (ii) is an alternative devise with respect to the primary devise,
(B) the alternative devise is not in the form of a class gift and the
expressly designated devisee of the alternative devise is entitled to take under the will.
(5) Unless the language creating a power of appointment expressly excludes the
substitution of the descendants of an appointee for the appointee, a surviving descendant of a deceased appointee of a power of appointment can be substituted for the appointee under this section, whether or not the descendant is an object of the power.
(c) [More Than One Substitute Gift; Which One Takes.] If, under subsection (b), substitute gifts are created and not superseded with respect to more than one devise and the devises are alternative devises, one to the other, the determination of which of the substitute gifts takes effect is resolved as follows:
(1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), the devised property passes under the primary substitute gift.
(2) If there is a younger-generation devise, the devised property passes under the younger-generation substitute gift and not under the primary substitute gift.
(3) In this subsection:
(A) “Primary devise” means the devise that would have taken effect had
all the deceased devisees of the alternative devises who left surviving descendants survived the testator.
(B) “Primary substitute gift” means the substitute gift created with respect
to the primary devise.
(C) “Younger-generation devise” means a devise that (i) is to a descendant of a devisee of the primary devise, (ii) is an alternative devise with respect to the primary devise,
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(iii) is a devise for which a substitute gift is created, and (iv) would have taken effect had all the
deceased devisees who left surviving descendants survived the testator except the deceased
devisee or devisees of the primary devise.
(D) “Younger-generation substitute gift” means the substitute gift created with respect to the younger-generation devise.
Comment
Purpose and Scope. Section 2-603 is a comprehensive antilapse statute that resolves a variety of interpretive questions that have arisen under standard antilapse statutes, including the antilapse statute of the pre-1990 Code.
Theory of Lapse. As explained in Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers § 1.2 (1999), the common-law rule of lapse is predicated on the principle that a will transfers property at the testator’s death, not when the will was executed, and on the principle that property cannot be transferred to a deceased individual. Under the rule of lapse, all devises are automatically and by law conditioned on survivorship of the testator. A devise to a devisee who predeceases the testator fails (lapses); the devised property does not pass to the devisee’s estate, to be distributed according to the devisee’s will or pass by intestate succession from the devisee. (Section 2-702 modifies the rule of lapse by presumptively conditioning devises on a 120-hour period of survival.)
“Antilapse” Statutes – Rationale of Section 2-603. Statutes such as Section 2-603 are commonly called “antilapse” statutes. An antilapse statute is remedial in nature, tending to preserve equality of treatment among different lines of succession. Although Section 2-603 is a rule of construction, and hence under Section 2-601 yields to a finding of a contrary intention, the remedial character of the statute means that it should be given the widest possible latitude to operate in considering whether the testator had formed a contrary intent. See Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers § 5.5 cmt. f (1999).
The 120-hour Survivorship Period. In effect, the requirement of survival of the testator’s death means survival of the 120-hour period following the testator’s death. This is because, under Section 2-702(a), “an individual who is not established to have survived an event ...by 120 hours is deemed to have predeceased the event.” As made clear by subsection (a)(8), for the purposes of Section 2-603, the “event” to which Section 2-702(a) relates is the testator’s death.
General Rule of Section 2-603 – Subsection (b). Subsection (b) states the general rule of Section 2-603. Subsection (b)(1) applies to individual devises; subsection (b)(2) applies to devises in class gift form. For the distinction between an individual devise and a devise in class gift form, see Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers §§ 13.1, 13.2 (2008). Together, subsections (b)(1) and (2) show that the “antilapse” label is somewhat
(D) “Younger-generation substitute gift” means the substitute gift created with respect to the younger-generation devise.
Comment
Purpose and Scope. Section 2-603 is a comprehensive antilapse statute that resolves a variety of interpretive questions that have arisen under standard antilapse statutes, including the antilapse statute of the pre-1990 Code.
Theory of Lapse. As explained in Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers § 1.2 (1999), the common-law rule of lapse is predicated on the principle that a will transfers property at the testator’s death, not when the will was executed, and on the principle that property cannot be transferred to a deceased individual. Under the rule of lapse, all devises are automatically and by law conditioned on survivorship of the testator. A devise to a devisee who predeceases the testator fails (lapses); the devised property does not pass to the devisee’s estate, to be distributed according to the devisee’s will or pass by intestate succession from the devisee. (Section 2-702 modifies the rule of lapse by presumptively conditioning devises on a 120-hour period of survival.)
“Antilapse” Statutes – Rationale of Section 2-603. Statutes such as Section 2-603 are commonly called “antilapse” statutes. An antilapse statute is remedial in nature, tending to preserve equality of treatment among different lines of succession. Although Section 2-603 is a rule of construction, and hence under Section 2-601 yields to a finding of a contrary intention, the remedial character of the statute means that it should be given the widest possible latitude to operate in considering whether the testator had formed a contrary intent. See Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers § 5.5 cmt. f (1999).
The 120-hour Survivorship Period. In effect, the requirement of survival of the testator’s death means survival of the 120-hour period following the testator’s death. This is because, under Section 2-702(a), “an individual who is not established to have survived an event ...by 120 hours is deemed to have predeceased the event.” As made clear by subsection (a)(8), for the purposes of Section 2-603, the “event” to which Section 2-702(a) relates is the testator’s death.
General Rule of Section 2-603 – Subsection (b). Subsection (b) states the general rule of Section 2-603. Subsection (b)(1) applies to individual devises; subsection (b)(2) applies to devises in class gift form. For the distinction between an individual devise and a devise in class gift form, see Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers §§ 13.1, 13.2 (2008). Together, subsections (b)(1) and (2) show that the “antilapse” label is somewhat
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misleading. Strictly speaking, these subsections do not reverse the common-law rule of lapse.
They do not abrogate the law-imposed condition of survivorship, so that devised property passes
to the estates of predeceasing devisees. Subsections (b)(1) and (2) leave the law-imposed
condition of survivorship intact, but modify the devolution of lapsed devises by providing a
statutory substitute gift in the case of specified relatives. The statutory substitute gift is to the
devisee’s descendants who survive the testator by 120 hours; they take the property to which the
devisee would have been entitled had the devisee survived the testator by 120 hours.
Class Gifts. In line with modern policy, subsection (b)(2) continues the pre-1990 Code’s approach of expressly extending the antilapse protection to class gifts. Subsection (b)(2) applies to single-generation class gifts (see Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers §§ 14.1, 14.2 (2008)) in which one or more class members fail to survive the testator (by 120 hours) leaving descendants who survive the testator (by 120 hours); in order for the subsection to apply, it is not necessary that any of the class members survive the testator (by 120 hours). Multiple-generation class gifts, i.e., class gifts to “issue,” “descendants,” “heirs of the body,” “heirs,” “next of kin,” “relatives,” “family,” or a class described by language of similar import are excluded, however, because antilapse protection is unnecessary in class gifts of these types. They already contain within themselves the idea of representation, under which a deceased class member’s descendants are substituted for him or her. See Sections 2-708, 2-709, 2-711; Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers §§ 14.3, 14.4 (2008).
“Void” Gifts. By virtue of subsection (a)(6), subsection (b) applies to the so-called “void” gift, where the devisee is dead at the time of execution of the will. Though contrary to some decisions, it seems likely that the testator would want the descendants of a person included, for example, in a class term but dead when the will is made to be treated like the descendants of another member of the class who was alive at the time the will was executed but who dies before the testator.
Protected Relatives. The specified relatives whose devises are protected by this section are the testator’s grandparents and their descendants and the testator’s stepchildren or, in the case of a testamentary exercise of a power of appointment, the testator’s (donee’s) or donor’s grandparents and their descendants and the testator’s or donor’s stepchildren. Subsection (a)(3), added by technical amendment in 2008, defines “descendant of a grandparent” as an individual who qualifies as a descendant of a grandparent of the testator or of the donor of a power of appointment under the (i) rules of construction applicable to a class gift created in the testator’s will if the devise or exercise of the power is in the form of a class gift or (ii) rules for intestate succession if the devise or exercise of the power is not in the form of a class gift.
Section 2-603 extends the “antilapse” protection to devises to the testator’s own stepchildren. The term “stepchild” is defined in subsection (a)(7). Antilapse protection is not extended to devises to descendants of the testator’s stepchildren or to stepchildren of any of the testator’s relatives. As to the testator’s own stepchildren, note that under Section 2-804 a devise to a stepchild might be revoked if the testator and the stepchild’s adoptive or genetic parent become divorced; the antilapse statute does not, of course, apply to a deceased stepchild’s devise if it was revoked by Section 2-804. Subsections (b)(1) and (2) give this result by providing that
Class Gifts. In line with modern policy, subsection (b)(2) continues the pre-1990 Code’s approach of expressly extending the antilapse protection to class gifts. Subsection (b)(2) applies to single-generation class gifts (see Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers §§ 14.1, 14.2 (2008)) in which one or more class members fail to survive the testator (by 120 hours) leaving descendants who survive the testator (by 120 hours); in order for the subsection to apply, it is not necessary that any of the class members survive the testator (by 120 hours). Multiple-generation class gifts, i.e., class gifts to “issue,” “descendants,” “heirs of the body,” “heirs,” “next of kin,” “relatives,” “family,” or a class described by language of similar import are excluded, however, because antilapse protection is unnecessary in class gifts of these types. They already contain within themselves the idea of representation, under which a deceased class member’s descendants are substituted for him or her. See Sections 2-708, 2-709, 2-711; Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers §§ 14.3, 14.4 (2008).
“Void” Gifts. By virtue of subsection (a)(6), subsection (b) applies to the so-called “void” gift, where the devisee is dead at the time of execution of the will. Though contrary to some decisions, it seems likely that the testator would want the descendants of a person included, for example, in a class term but dead when the will is made to be treated like the descendants of another member of the class who was alive at the time the will was executed but who dies before the testator.
Protected Relatives. The specified relatives whose devises are protected by this section are the testator’s grandparents and their descendants and the testator’s stepchildren or, in the case of a testamentary exercise of a power of appointment, the testator’s (donee’s) or donor’s grandparents and their descendants and the testator’s or donor’s stepchildren. Subsection (a)(3), added by technical amendment in 2008, defines “descendant of a grandparent” as an individual who qualifies as a descendant of a grandparent of the testator or of the donor of a power of appointment under the (i) rules of construction applicable to a class gift created in the testator’s will if the devise or exercise of the power is in the form of a class gift or (ii) rules for intestate succession if the devise or exercise of the power is not in the form of a class gift.
Section 2-603 extends the “antilapse” protection to devises to the testator’s own stepchildren. The term “stepchild” is defined in subsection (a)(7). Antilapse protection is not extended to devises to descendants of the testator’s stepchildren or to stepchildren of any of the testator’s relatives. As to the testator’s own stepchildren, note that under Section 2-804 a devise to a stepchild might be revoked if the testator and the stepchild’s adoptive or genetic parent become divorced; the antilapse statute does not, of course, apply to a deceased stepchild’s devise if it was revoked by Section 2-804. Subsections (b)(1) and (2) give this result by providing that
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the substituted descendants take the property to which the deceased devisee or deceased class
member would have been entitled if he or she had survived the testator. If a deceased stepchild
whose devise was revoked by Section 2-804 had survived the testator, that stepchild would not
have been entitled to his or her devise, and so his or her descendants take nothing, either.
Other than stepchildren, devisees related to the testator by affinity are not protected by this section.
Section 2-603 Applicable to Testamentary Exercise of a Power of Appointment Where Appointee Fails to Survive the Testator. Subsections (a)(5), (6), (7), (9), and (b)(5) extend the protection of this section to appointees under a power of appointment exercised by the testator’s will. The extension of the antilapse statute to powers of appointment is a step long overdue. The extension is supported by the Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers § 19.12 (2008).
Substitute Gifts. The substitute gifts provided for by subsections (b)(1) and (2) are to the deceased devisee’s descendants. Subsection (a)(4), added by technical amendment in 2008, defines “descendants” as the descendants of a deceased devisee or class member who would take under a class gift created in the testator’s will. As such, the rules of construction in Section 2- 705 are applicable. The rules of construction in Section 2-705 are subject to a finding of a contrary intent as described in Section 2-701. A contrary intent to the rules of construction in Section 2-705 could be found, for example, in the definitions section of the testator’s will.
The 120-hour survival requirement stated in Section 2-702 does not require descendants who would be substituted for their parent by this section to survive their parent by any set period. Thus, if a devisee who is a protected relative survives the testator by less than 120 hours, the substitute gift is to the devisee’s descendants who survive the testator by 120 hours; survival of the devisee by 120 hours is not required.
The statutory substitute gift is divided among the devisee’s descendants “by representation,” a phrase defined in Section 2-709(b).
Section 2-603 Restricted to Wills. Section 2-603 is applicable only when a devisee of a will predeceases the testator. It does not apply to beneficiary designations in life-insurance policies, retirement plans, or transfer-on-death accounts, nor does it apply to inter-vivos trusts, whether revocable or irrevocable. See, however, Sections 2-706 and 2-707 for rules of construction applicable when the beneficiary of a life-insurance policy, a retirement plan, or a transfer-on-death account predeceases the decedent or when the beneficiary of a future interest is not living when the interest is to take effect in possession or enjoyment.
Contrary Intention – the Rationale of Subsection (b)(3). An antilapse statute is a rule of construction, designed to carry out presumed intention. In effect, Section 2-603 declares that when a testator devises property “to A (a specified relative),” the testator (if he or she had thought further about it) is presumed to have wanted to add: “but if A is not alive (120 hours after my death), I devise the property in A’s stead to A’s descendants (who survive me by 120 hours).”
Other than stepchildren, devisees related to the testator by affinity are not protected by this section.
Section 2-603 Applicable to Testamentary Exercise of a Power of Appointment Where Appointee Fails to Survive the Testator. Subsections (a)(5), (6), (7), (9), and (b)(5) extend the protection of this section to appointees under a power of appointment exercised by the testator’s will. The extension of the antilapse statute to powers of appointment is a step long overdue. The extension is supported by the Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers § 19.12 (2008).
Substitute Gifts. The substitute gifts provided for by subsections (b)(1) and (2) are to the deceased devisee’s descendants. Subsection (a)(4), added by technical amendment in 2008, defines “descendants” as the descendants of a deceased devisee or class member who would take under a class gift created in the testator’s will. As such, the rules of construction in Section 2- 705 are applicable. The rules of construction in Section 2-705 are subject to a finding of a contrary intent as described in Section 2-701. A contrary intent to the rules of construction in Section 2-705 could be found, for example, in the definitions section of the testator’s will.
The 120-hour survival requirement stated in Section 2-702 does not require descendants who would be substituted for their parent by this section to survive their parent by any set period. Thus, if a devisee who is a protected relative survives the testator by less than 120 hours, the substitute gift is to the devisee’s descendants who survive the testator by 120 hours; survival of the devisee by 120 hours is not required.
The statutory substitute gift is divided among the devisee’s descendants “by representation,” a phrase defined in Section 2-709(b).
Section 2-603 Restricted to Wills. Section 2-603 is applicable only when a devisee of a will predeceases the testator. It does not apply to beneficiary designations in life-insurance policies, retirement plans, or transfer-on-death accounts, nor does it apply to inter-vivos trusts, whether revocable or irrevocable. See, however, Sections 2-706 and 2-707 for rules of construction applicable when the beneficiary of a life-insurance policy, a retirement plan, or a transfer-on-death account predeceases the decedent or when the beneficiary of a future interest is not living when the interest is to take effect in possession or enjoyment.
Contrary Intention – the Rationale of Subsection (b)(3). An antilapse statute is a rule of construction, designed to carry out presumed intention. In effect, Section 2-603 declares that when a testator devises property “to A (a specified relative),” the testator (if he or she had thought further about it) is presumed to have wanted to add: “but if A is not alive (120 hours after my death), I devise the property in A’s stead to A’s descendants (who survive me by 120 hours).”
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Under Section 2-601, the rule of Section 2-603 yields to a finding of a contrary intention.
A foolproof means of expressing a contrary intention is to add to a devise the phrase “and not to
[the devisee’s] descendants.” See Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative
Transfers § 5.5 cmt. i (1999). In the case of a power of appointment, the phrase “and not to an
appointee’s descendants” can be added by the donor of the power in the document creating the
power of appointment, if the donor does not want the antilapse statute to apply to an appointment
under a power. See Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers §
19.12 cmts. c & g (2008). In addition, adding to the residuary clause a phrase such as “including
all lapsed or failed devises,” adding to a nonresiduary devise a phrase such as “if the devisee
does not survive me, the devise is to pass under the residuary clause,” or adding a separate clause
providing generally that “if the devisee of any nonresiduary devise does not survive me, the
devise is to pass under the residuary clause” makes the residuary clause an “alternative devise.”
Under subsection (b)(4), as clarified by technical amendment in 2008, an alternative devise
supersedes a substitute gift created by subsection (b)(1) or (2) if: (A) the alternative devise is in
the form of a class gift and one or more members of the class is entitled to take under the will; or
(B) the alternative devise is not in the form of a class gift and the expressly designated devisee of
the alternative devise is entitled to take under the will. See infra Example 3.
A much-litigated question is whether mere words of survivorship – such as in a devise “to my daughter, A, if A survives me” or “to my surviving children” – automatically defeat the antilapse statute. Lawyers who believe that the attachment of words of survivorship to a devise is a foolproof method of defeating an antilapse statute are mistaken. The very fact that the question is litigated so frequently is itself proof that the use of mere words of survivorship is far from foolproof. In addition, the results of the litigated cases are divided on the question. To be sure, many cases hold that mere words of survivorship do automatically defeat the antilapse statute. E.g., Estate of Stroble, 636 P.2d 236 (Kan. Ct. App. 1981); Annot., 63 A.L.R.2d 1172, 1186 (1959); Annot., 92 A.L.R. 846, 857 (1934). Other cases, however, and the Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers § 5.5 cmt. h (1999), reach the opposite conclusion. E.g., Ruotolo v. Tietjen, 890 A.2d 166 (Conn. App. Ct. 2006), aff’d per curiam, 916 A.2d 1 (Conn. 2007) (residuary devise of half of the residue to testator’s stepdaughter “if she survives me”; stepdaughter predeceased testator leaving a daughter who survived testator; citing this section and the Restatement, court held that the survival language did not defeat the antilapse statute); Estate of Ulrikson, 290 N.W.2d 757 (Minn. 1980) (residuary devise to testator’s brother Melvin and sister Rodine, and “in the event that either one of them shall predecease me, then to the other surviving brother or sister”; Melvin and Rodine predeceased testator, Melvin but not Rodine leaving descendants who survived testator; court held residue passed to Melvin’s descendants under antilapse statute); Detzel v. Nieberding, 219 N.E.2d 327 (Ohio P. Ct. 1966) (devise of $5,000 to sister “provided she be living at the time of my death”; sister predeceased testator; court held $5,000 devise passed under antilapse statute to sister’s descendants); Henderson v. Parker, 728 S.W.2d 768 (Tex. 1987) (devise of all of testator’s property “unto our surviving children of this marriage”; two of testator’s children survived testator, but one child, William, predeceased testator leaving descendants who survived testator; court held that share William would have taken passed to William’s descendants under antilapse statute; words of survivorship found ineffective to counteract antilapse statute because court interpreted those words as merely restricting the devisees to those living at the time the will was executed). It may
A much-litigated question is whether mere words of survivorship – such as in a devise “to my daughter, A, if A survives me” or “to my surviving children” – automatically defeat the antilapse statute. Lawyers who believe that the attachment of words of survivorship to a devise is a foolproof method of defeating an antilapse statute are mistaken. The very fact that the question is litigated so frequently is itself proof that the use of mere words of survivorship is far from foolproof. In addition, the results of the litigated cases are divided on the question. To be sure, many cases hold that mere words of survivorship do automatically defeat the antilapse statute. E.g., Estate of Stroble, 636 P.2d 236 (Kan. Ct. App. 1981); Annot., 63 A.L.R.2d 1172, 1186 (1959); Annot., 92 A.L.R. 846, 857 (1934). Other cases, however, and the Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers § 5.5 cmt. h (1999), reach the opposite conclusion. E.g., Ruotolo v. Tietjen, 890 A.2d 166 (Conn. App. Ct. 2006), aff’d per curiam, 916 A.2d 1 (Conn. 2007) (residuary devise of half of the residue to testator’s stepdaughter “if she survives me”; stepdaughter predeceased testator leaving a daughter who survived testator; citing this section and the Restatement, court held that the survival language did not defeat the antilapse statute); Estate of Ulrikson, 290 N.W.2d 757 (Minn. 1980) (residuary devise to testator’s brother Melvin and sister Rodine, and “in the event that either one of them shall predecease me, then to the other surviving brother or sister”; Melvin and Rodine predeceased testator, Melvin but not Rodine leaving descendants who survived testator; court held residue passed to Melvin’s descendants under antilapse statute); Detzel v. Nieberding, 219 N.E.2d 327 (Ohio P. Ct. 1966) (devise of $5,000 to sister “provided she be living at the time of my death”; sister predeceased testator; court held $5,000 devise passed under antilapse statute to sister’s descendants); Henderson v. Parker, 728 S.W.2d 768 (Tex. 1987) (devise of all of testator’s property “unto our surviving children of this marriage”; two of testator’s children survived testator, but one child, William, predeceased testator leaving descendants who survived testator; court held that share William would have taken passed to William’s descendants under antilapse statute; words of survivorship found ineffective to counteract antilapse statute because court interpreted those words as merely restricting the devisees to those living at the time the will was executed). It may
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also be noted that the antilapse statutes in some other common-law countries expressly provide
that words of survivorship do not defeat the statute. See, e.g., Queensland Succession Act 1981,
§ 33(2) (“A general requirement or condition that [protected relatives] survive the testator or
attain a specified age is not a contrary intention for the purposes of this section.”).
Subsection (b)(3) adopts the position that mere words of survivorship do not – by themselves, in the absence of additional evidence – lead to automatic defeat of the antilapse statute. As noted in French, “Antilapse Statutes Are Blunt Instruments: A Blueprint for Reform,” 37 Hastings L. J. 335, 369 (1985) “courts have tended to accord too much significance to survival requirements when deciding whether to apply antilapse statutes.”
A formalistic argument sometimes employed by courts adopting the view that words of survivorship automatically defeat the antilapse statute is that, when words of survivorship are used, there is nothing upon which the antilapse statute can operate; the devise itself, it is said, is eliminated by the devisee’s having predeceased the testator. The language of subsections (b)(1) and (2), however, nullify this formalistic argument by providing that the predeceased devisee’s descendants take the property to which the devisee would have been entitled had the devisee survived the testator.
Another objection to applying the antilapse statute is that mere words of survivorship somehow establish a contrary intention. The argument is that attaching words of survivorship indicates that the testator thought about the matter and intentionally did not provide a substitute gift to the devisee’s descendants. At best, this is an inference only, which may or may not accurately reflect the testator’s actual intention. An equally plausible inference is that the words of survivorship are in the testator’s will merely because the testator’s lawyer used a will form with words of survivorship. The testator who went to lawyer X and ended up with a will containing devises with a survivorship requirement could by chance have gone to lawyer Y and ended up with a will containing devises with no survivorship requirement – with no different intent on the testator’s part from one case to the other.
Even a lawyer’s deliberate use of mere words of survivorship to defeat the antilapse statute does not guarantee that the lawyer’s intention represents the client’s intention. Any linkage between the lawyer’s intention and the client’s intention is speculative unless the lawyer discussed the matter with the client. Especially in the case of younger-generation devisees, such as the client’s children or nieces and nephews, it cannot be assumed that all clients, on their own, have anticipated the possibility that the devisee will predecease the client and will have thought through who should take the devised property in case the never-anticipated event happens.
If, however, evidence establishes that the lawyer did discuss the question with the client, and that the client decided that, for example, if the client’s child predeceases the client, the deceased child’s children (the client’s grandchildren) should not take the devise in place of the deceased child, then the combination of the words of survivorship and the extrinsic evidence of the client’s intention would support a finding of a contrary intention under Section 2-601. See Example 1, below. For this reason, Sections 2-601 and 2-603 will not expose lawyers to malpractice liability for the amount that, in the absence of the finding of the contrary intention, would have passed under the antilapse statute to a deceased devisee’s descendants. The success
Subsection (b)(3) adopts the position that mere words of survivorship do not – by themselves, in the absence of additional evidence – lead to automatic defeat of the antilapse statute. As noted in French, “Antilapse Statutes Are Blunt Instruments: A Blueprint for Reform,” 37 Hastings L. J. 335, 369 (1985) “courts have tended to accord too much significance to survival requirements when deciding whether to apply antilapse statutes.”
A formalistic argument sometimes employed by courts adopting the view that words of survivorship automatically defeat the antilapse statute is that, when words of survivorship are used, there is nothing upon which the antilapse statute can operate; the devise itself, it is said, is eliminated by the devisee’s having predeceased the testator. The language of subsections (b)(1) and (2), however, nullify this formalistic argument by providing that the predeceased devisee’s descendants take the property to which the devisee would have been entitled had the devisee survived the testator.
Another objection to applying the antilapse statute is that mere words of survivorship somehow establish a contrary intention. The argument is that attaching words of survivorship indicates that the testator thought about the matter and intentionally did not provide a substitute gift to the devisee’s descendants. At best, this is an inference only, which may or may not accurately reflect the testator’s actual intention. An equally plausible inference is that the words of survivorship are in the testator’s will merely because the testator’s lawyer used a will form with words of survivorship. The testator who went to lawyer X and ended up with a will containing devises with a survivorship requirement could by chance have gone to lawyer Y and ended up with a will containing devises with no survivorship requirement – with no different intent on the testator’s part from one case to the other.
Even a lawyer’s deliberate use of mere words of survivorship to defeat the antilapse statute does not guarantee that the lawyer’s intention represents the client’s intention. Any linkage between the lawyer’s intention and the client’s intention is speculative unless the lawyer discussed the matter with the client. Especially in the case of younger-generation devisees, such as the client’s children or nieces and nephews, it cannot be assumed that all clients, on their own, have anticipated the possibility that the devisee will predecease the client and will have thought through who should take the devised property in case the never-anticipated event happens.
If, however, evidence establishes that the lawyer did discuss the question with the client, and that the client decided that, for example, if the client’s child predeceases the client, the deceased child’s children (the client’s grandchildren) should not take the devise in place of the deceased child, then the combination of the words of survivorship and the extrinsic evidence of the client’s intention would support a finding of a contrary intention under Section 2-601. See Example 1, below. For this reason, Sections 2-601 and 2-603 will not expose lawyers to malpractice liability for the amount that, in the absence of the finding of the contrary intention, would have passed under the antilapse statute to a deceased devisee’s descendants. The success
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of a malpractice claim depends upon sufficient evidence of a client’s intention and the lawyer’s
failure to carry out that intention. In a case in which there is evidence that the client did not want
the antilapse statute to apply, that evidence would support a finding of a contrary intention under
Section 2-601, thus preventing the client’s intention from being defeated by Section 2-603 and
protecting the lawyer from liability for the amount that, in the absence of the finding of a
contrary intention, would have passed under the antilapse statute to a deceased devisee’s
descendants.
Any inference about actual intention to be drawn from mere words of survivorship is especially problematic in the case of will substitutes such as life insurance, where it is less likely that the insured had the assistance of a lawyer in drafting the beneficiary designation. Although Section 2-603 only applies to wills, a companion provision is Section 2-706, which applies to will substitutes, including life insurance. Section 2-706 also contains language similar to that in subsection (b)(3), directing that words of survivorship do not, in the absence of additional evidence, indicate an intent contrary to the application of this section. It would be anomalous to provide one rule for wills and a different rule for will substitutes.
The basic operation of Section 2-603 is illustrated in the following example:
Example 1. G’s will devised “$10,000 to my surviving children.” G had two children, A and B. A predeceased G, leaving a child, X, who survived G by 120 hours. B also survived G by 120 hours.
Solution: Under subsection (b)(2), X takes $5,000 and B takes $5,000. The substitute gift to A’s descendant, X, is not defeated by the fact that the devise is a class gift nor, under subsection (b)(3), is it automatically defeated by the fact that the word “surviving” is used.
Note that subsection (b)(3) provides that words of survivorship are not by themselves to be taken as expressing a contrary intention for purposes of Section 2-601. Under Section 2-601, a finding of a contrary intention could appropriately be based on affirmative evidence that G deliberately used the words of survivorship to defeat the antilapse statute. In the case of such a finding, B would take the full $10,000 devise. Relevant evidence tending to support such a finding might be a pre-execution letter or memorandum to G from G’s attorney stating that G’s attorney used the word “surviving” for the purpose of assuring that if one of G’s children were to predecease G, that child’s descendants would not take the predeceased child’s share under any statute or rule of law.
In the absence of persuasive evidence of a contrary intent, however, the antilapse statute, being remedial in nature, and tending to preserve equality among different lines of succession, should be given the widest possible chance to operate and should be defeated only by a finding of intention that directly contradicts the substitute gift created by the statute. Mere words of survivorship – by themselves – do not directly contradict the statutory substitute gift to the descendants of a deceased devisee. The common law of lapse already conditions all devises on survivorship (and Section 2-702 presumptively conditions all devises on survivorship by 120 hours). As noted above, the antilapse statute does not reverse the law-imposed requirement of survivorship in any strict sense; it merely alters the devolution of lapsed devises by substituting
Any inference about actual intention to be drawn from mere words of survivorship is especially problematic in the case of will substitutes such as life insurance, where it is less likely that the insured had the assistance of a lawyer in drafting the beneficiary designation. Although Section 2-603 only applies to wills, a companion provision is Section 2-706, which applies to will substitutes, including life insurance. Section 2-706 also contains language similar to that in subsection (b)(3), directing that words of survivorship do not, in the absence of additional evidence, indicate an intent contrary to the application of this section. It would be anomalous to provide one rule for wills and a different rule for will substitutes.
The basic operation of Section 2-603 is illustrated in the following example:
Example 1. G’s will devised “$10,000 to my surviving children.” G had two children, A and B. A predeceased G, leaving a child, X, who survived G by 120 hours. B also survived G by 120 hours.
Solution: Under subsection (b)(2), X takes $5,000 and B takes $5,000. The substitute gift to A’s descendant, X, is not defeated by the fact that the devise is a class gift nor, under subsection (b)(3), is it automatically defeated by the fact that the word “surviving” is used.
Note that subsection (b)(3) provides that words of survivorship are not by themselves to be taken as expressing a contrary intention for purposes of Section 2-601. Under Section 2-601, a finding of a contrary intention could appropriately be based on affirmative evidence that G deliberately used the words of survivorship to defeat the antilapse statute. In the case of such a finding, B would take the full $10,000 devise. Relevant evidence tending to support such a finding might be a pre-execution letter or memorandum to G from G’s attorney stating that G’s attorney used the word “surviving” for the purpose of assuring that if one of G’s children were to predecease G, that child’s descendants would not take the predeceased child’s share under any statute or rule of law.
In the absence of persuasive evidence of a contrary intent, however, the antilapse statute, being remedial in nature, and tending to preserve equality among different lines of succession, should be given the widest possible chance to operate and should be defeated only by a finding of intention that directly contradicts the substitute gift created by the statute. Mere words of survivorship – by themselves – do not directly contradict the statutory substitute gift to the descendants of a deceased devisee. The common law of lapse already conditions all devises on survivorship (and Section 2-702 presumptively conditions all devises on survivorship by 120 hours). As noted above, the antilapse statute does not reverse the law-imposed requirement of survivorship in any strict sense; it merely alters the devolution of lapsed devises by substituting
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the deceased devisee’s descendants in place of those who would otherwise take. Thus, mere
words of survivorship merely duplicate the law-imposed survivorship requirement deriving from
the rule of lapse, and do not contradict the statutory substitute gift created by subsection (b)(1) or
(2).
Subsection (b)(4). Under subsection (b)(4), as clarified by technical amendment in 2008, a statutory substitute gift is superseded if the testator’s will expressly provides for its own alternative devisee and if: (A) the alternative devise is in the form of a class gift and one or more members of the class is entitled to take under the will; or (B) the alternative devise is not in the form of a class gift and the expressly designated devisee of the alternative devise is entitled to take under the will. For example, the statute’s substitute gift would be superseded in the case of a devise “to A if A survives me; if not, to B,” where B survived the testator but A predeceased the testator leaving descendants who survived the testator. Under subsection (b)(4), B, not A’s descendants, would take. In the same example, however, it should be noted that A’s descendants would take under the statute if B as well as A predeceased the testator, for in that case B (the “expressly designated devisee of the alternative devise”) would not be entitled to take under the will. This would be true even if B left descendants who survived the testator; B’s descendants are not “expressly designated devisees of the alternative devise.”
It should also be noted that, for purposes of Section 2-601, an alternative devise might indicate a contrary intention even if subsection (b)(4) is inapplicable. To illustrate this point, consider a variation of Example 1. Suppose that in Example 1, G’s will devised “$10,000 to my surviving children, but if none of my children survives me, to the descendants of deceased children”. The alternative devise to the descendants of deceased children would not cause the substitute gift to X to be superseded under subsection (b)(4) because the condition precedent to the alternative devise – “if none of my children survives me” – was not satisfied; one of G’s children, B, survived G. Hence the alternative devisees would not be entitled to take under the will. Nevertheless, the italicized language would indicate that G did not intend to substitute descendants of deceased children unless all of G’s children failed to survive G. Thus, although A predeceased G leaving a child, X who survived G by 120 hours, X would not be substituted for A. B, G’s surviving child, would take the whole $10,000 devise.
The above variation of Example 1 is to be distinguished from other variations, such as one in which G’s will devised “$10,000 to my surviving children, but if none of my children survives me, to my brothers and sisters”. The italicized language in this variation would not indicate that G did not intend to substitute descendants of deceased children unless all of G’s children failed to survive G. In addition, even if one or more of G’s brothers and sisters survived G, the alternative devise would not cause the substitute gift to X to be superseded under subsection (b)(4); the alternative devisees would not be entitled to take under the will because the alternative devise is expressly conditioned on none of G’s children surviving G. Thus, X would be substituted for A, allowing X and B to divide the $10,000 equally (as in the original version of Example 1.)
Subsection (b)(4) is further illustrated by the following examples:
Example 2. G’s will devised “$10,000 to my sister, S” and devised “the rest, residue, and
Subsection (b)(4). Under subsection (b)(4), as clarified by technical amendment in 2008, a statutory substitute gift is superseded if the testator’s will expressly provides for its own alternative devisee and if: (A) the alternative devise is in the form of a class gift and one or more members of the class is entitled to take under the will; or (B) the alternative devise is not in the form of a class gift and the expressly designated devisee of the alternative devise is entitled to take under the will. For example, the statute’s substitute gift would be superseded in the case of a devise “to A if A survives me; if not, to B,” where B survived the testator but A predeceased the testator leaving descendants who survived the testator. Under subsection (b)(4), B, not A’s descendants, would take. In the same example, however, it should be noted that A’s descendants would take under the statute if B as well as A predeceased the testator, for in that case B (the “expressly designated devisee of the alternative devise”) would not be entitled to take under the will. This would be true even if B left descendants who survived the testator; B’s descendants are not “expressly designated devisees of the alternative devise.”
It should also be noted that, for purposes of Section 2-601, an alternative devise might indicate a contrary intention even if subsection (b)(4) is inapplicable. To illustrate this point, consider a variation of Example 1. Suppose that in Example 1, G’s will devised “$10,000 to my surviving children, but if none of my children survives me, to the descendants of deceased children”. The alternative devise to the descendants of deceased children would not cause the substitute gift to X to be superseded under subsection (b)(4) because the condition precedent to the alternative devise – “if none of my children survives me” – was not satisfied; one of G’s children, B, survived G. Hence the alternative devisees would not be entitled to take under the will. Nevertheless, the italicized language would indicate that G did not intend to substitute descendants of deceased children unless all of G’s children failed to survive G. Thus, although A predeceased G leaving a child, X who survived G by 120 hours, X would not be substituted for A. B, G’s surviving child, would take the whole $10,000 devise.
The above variation of Example 1 is to be distinguished from other variations, such as one in which G’s will devised “$10,000 to my surviving children, but if none of my children survives me, to my brothers and sisters”. The italicized language in this variation would not indicate that G did not intend to substitute descendants of deceased children unless all of G’s children failed to survive G. In addition, even if one or more of G’s brothers and sisters survived G, the alternative devise would not cause the substitute gift to X to be superseded under subsection (b)(4); the alternative devisees would not be entitled to take under the will because the alternative devise is expressly conditioned on none of G’s children surviving G. Thus, X would be substituted for A, allowing X and B to divide the $10,000 equally (as in the original version of Example 1.)
Subsection (b)(4) is further illustrated by the following examples:
Example 2. G’s will devised “$10,000 to my sister, S” and devised “the rest, residue, and
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remainder of my estate to X-Charity.” S predeceased G, leaving a child, N, who survived G by
120 hours.
Solution: S’s $10,000 devise goes to N, not to X-Charity. The residuary clause does not create an “alternative devise,” as defined in subsection (a)(1), because neither it nor any other language in the will specifically provides that S’s $10,000 devise or lapsed or failed devises in general pass under the residuary clause.
Example 3. Same facts as Example 2, except that G’s residuary clause devised “the rest, residue, and remainder of my estate, including all failed and lapsed devises, to X-Charity.”
Solution: S’s $10,000 devise goes to X-Charity, not to N. Under subsection (b)(4), the substitute gift to N created by subsection (b)(1) is superseded. The residuary clause expressly creates an “alternative devise,” as defined in subsection (a)(1), in favor of X-Charity and that alternative devisee, X-Charity, is entitled to take under the will.
Example 4. G’s will devised “$10,000 to my two children, A and B, or to the survivor of them.” A predeceased G, leaving a child, X, who survived G by 120 hours. B also survived G by 120 hours.
Solution: B takes the full $10,000. Because the takers of the $10,000 devise are both named and numbered (“my two children, A and B”), the devise is not in the form of a class gift. See Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers § 13.2 (2008). The substance of the devise is as if it read “half of $10,000 to A, but if A predeceases me, that half to B if B survives me and the other half of $10,000 to B, but if B predeceases me, that other half to A if A survives me.” With respect to each half, A and B have alternative devises, one to the other. Subsection (b)(1) creates a substitute gift to A’s descendant, X, with respect to A’s alternative devise in each half. Under subsection (b)(4), however, that substitute gift to X with respect to each half is superseded by the alternative devise to B because the alternative devisee, B, survived G by 120 hours and is entitled to take under G’s will.
Example 5. G’s will devised “$10,000 to my two children, A and B, or to the survivor of them.” A and B predeceased G. A left a child, X, who survived G by 120 hours; B died childless.
Solution: X takes the full $10,000. Because the devise itself is in the same form as the one in Example 4, the substance of the devise is as if it read “half of $10,000 to A, but if A predeceases me, that half to B if B survives me and the other half of $10,000 to B, but if B predeceases me, that other half to A if A survives me.” With respect to each half, A and B have alternative devises, one to the other. As in Example 4, subsection (b)(1) creates a substitute gift to A’s descendant, X, with respect to A’s alternative devise in each half. Unlike the situation in Example 4, however, neither substitute gift to X is superseded under subsection (b)(4) by the alternative devise to B because, in this case, the alternative devisee, B, failed to survive G by 120 hours and is therefore not entitled to take either half under G’s will.
Note that the order of deaths as between A and B is irrelevant. The phrase “or to the
Solution: S’s $10,000 devise goes to N, not to X-Charity. The residuary clause does not create an “alternative devise,” as defined in subsection (a)(1), because neither it nor any other language in the will specifically provides that S’s $10,000 devise or lapsed or failed devises in general pass under the residuary clause.
Example 3. Same facts as Example 2, except that G’s residuary clause devised “the rest, residue, and remainder of my estate, including all failed and lapsed devises, to X-Charity.”
Solution: S’s $10,000 devise goes to X-Charity, not to N. Under subsection (b)(4), the substitute gift to N created by subsection (b)(1) is superseded. The residuary clause expressly creates an “alternative devise,” as defined in subsection (a)(1), in favor of X-Charity and that alternative devisee, X-Charity, is entitled to take under the will.
Example 4. G’s will devised “$10,000 to my two children, A and B, or to the survivor of them.” A predeceased G, leaving a child, X, who survived G by 120 hours. B also survived G by 120 hours.
Solution: B takes the full $10,000. Because the takers of the $10,000 devise are both named and numbered (“my two children, A and B”), the devise is not in the form of a class gift. See Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers § 13.2 (2008). The substance of the devise is as if it read “half of $10,000 to A, but if A predeceases me, that half to B if B survives me and the other half of $10,000 to B, but if B predeceases me, that other half to A if A survives me.” With respect to each half, A and B have alternative devises, one to the other. Subsection (b)(1) creates a substitute gift to A’s descendant, X, with respect to A’s alternative devise in each half. Under subsection (b)(4), however, that substitute gift to X with respect to each half is superseded by the alternative devise to B because the alternative devisee, B, survived G by 120 hours and is entitled to take under G’s will.
Example 5. G’s will devised “$10,000 to my two children, A and B, or to the survivor of them.” A and B predeceased G. A left a child, X, who survived G by 120 hours; B died childless.
Solution: X takes the full $10,000. Because the devise itself is in the same form as the one in Example 4, the substance of the devise is as if it read “half of $10,000 to A, but if A predeceases me, that half to B if B survives me and the other half of $10,000 to B, but if B predeceases me, that other half to A if A survives me.” With respect to each half, A and B have alternative devises, one to the other. As in Example 4, subsection (b)(1) creates a substitute gift to A’s descendant, X, with respect to A’s alternative devise in each half. Unlike the situation in Example 4, however, neither substitute gift to X is superseded under subsection (b)(4) by the alternative devise to B because, in this case, the alternative devisee, B, failed to survive G by 120 hours and is therefore not entitled to take either half under G’s will.
Note that the order of deaths as between A and B is irrelevant. The phrase “or to the
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survivor” does not mean the survivor as between them if they both predecease G; it refers to the
one who survives G if one but not the other survives G.
Example 6. G’s will devised “$10,000 to my son, A, if he is living at my death; if not, to A’s children.” A predeceased G. A’s child, X, also predeceased G. A’s other child, Y and X’s children, M and N, survived G by 120 hours.
Solution: Half of the devise ($5,000) goes to Y. The other half ($5,000) goes to M and N.
Because A failed to survive G by 120 hours and left descendants who survived G by 120 hours, subsection (b)(1) substitutes A’s descendants who survived G by 120 hours for A. But that substitute gift is superseded under subsection (b)(4) by the alternative devise to A’s children. Under subsection (b)(4), as clarified by technical amendment in 2008, an alternative devise supersedes a substitute gift if the alternative devise is in the form of a class gift and one or more members of the class is entitled to take under the will. Because the alternative devise is in the form of a class gift (see Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers § 13.1 (2008), and because one member of the class, Y, survived the testator and is entitled to take, the substitute gift under subsection (b)(1) is superseded.
Because the alternative devise to A’s children is in the form of a class gift, however, and because one of the class members, X, failed to survive G by 120 hours and left descendants who survived G by 120 hours, subsection (b)(2) applies and substitutes M and N for X.
Subsection (c). Subsection (c) is necessary because there can be cases in which subsections (b)(1) or (2) create substitute gifts with respect to two or more alternative devises of the same property, and those substitute gifts are not superseded under the terms of subsection (b)(4). Subsection (c) provides the tie-breaking mechanism for such situations.
The initial step is to determine which of the alternative devises would take effect had all the devisees themselves survived the testator (by 120 hours). In subsection (c), this devise is called the “primary devise.” Unless subsection (c)(2) applies, subsection (c)(1) provides that the devised property passes under substitute gift created with respect to the primary devise. This substitute gift is called the “primary substitute gift.” Thus, the devised property goes to the descendants of the devisee or devisees of the primary devise.
Subsection (c)(2) provides an exception to this rule. Under subsection (c)(2), the devised property does not pass under the primary substitute gift if there is a “younger-generation devise” – defined as a devise that (i) is to a descendant of a devisee of the primary devise, (ii) is an alternative devise with respect to the primary devise, (iii) is a devise for which a substitute gift is created, and (iv) would have taken effect had all the deceased devisees who left surviving descendants survived the testator except the deceased devisee or devisees of the primary devise. If there is a younger-generation devise, the devised property passes under the “younger- generation substitute gift” – defined as the substitute gift created with respect to the younger- generation devise.
Example 6. G’s will devised “$10,000 to my son, A, if he is living at my death; if not, to A’s children.” A predeceased G. A’s child, X, also predeceased G. A’s other child, Y and X’s children, M and N, survived G by 120 hours.
Solution: Half of the devise ($5,000) goes to Y. The other half ($5,000) goes to M and N.
Because A failed to survive G by 120 hours and left descendants who survived G by 120 hours, subsection (b)(1) substitutes A’s descendants who survived G by 120 hours for A. But that substitute gift is superseded under subsection (b)(4) by the alternative devise to A’s children. Under subsection (b)(4), as clarified by technical amendment in 2008, an alternative devise supersedes a substitute gift if the alternative devise is in the form of a class gift and one or more members of the class is entitled to take under the will. Because the alternative devise is in the form of a class gift (see Restatement (Third) of Property: Wills and Other Donative Transfers § 13.1 (2008), and because one member of the class, Y, survived the testator and is entitled to take, the substitute gift under subsection (b)(1) is superseded.
Because the alternative devise to A’s children is in the form of a class gift, however, and because one of the class members, X, failed to survive G by 120 hours and left descendants who survived G by 120 hours, subsection (b)(2) applies and substitutes M and N for X.
Subsection (c). Subsection (c) is necessary because there can be cases in which subsections (b)(1) or (2) create substitute gifts with respect to two or more alternative devises of the same property, and those substitute gifts are not superseded under the terms of subsection (b)(4). Subsection (c) provides the tie-breaking mechanism for such situations.
The initial step is to determine which of the alternative devises would take effect had all the devisees themselves survived the testator (by 120 hours). In subsection (c), this devise is called the “primary devise.” Unless subsection (c)(2) applies, subsection (c)(1) provides that the devised property passes under substitute gift created with respect to the primary devise. This substitute gift is called the “primary substitute gift.” Thus, the devised property goes to the descendants of the devisee or devisees of the primary devise.
Subsection (c)(2) provides an exception to this rule. Under subsection (c)(2), the devised property does not pass under the primary substitute gift if there is a “younger-generation devise” – defined as a devise that (i) is to a descendant of a devisee of the primary devise, (ii) is an alternative devise with respect to the primary devise, (iii) is a devise for which a substitute gift is created, and (iv) would have taken effect had all the deceased devisees who left surviving descendants survived the testator except the deceased devisee or devisees of the primary devise. If there is a younger-generation devise, the devised property passes under the “younger- generation substitute gift” – defined as the substitute gift created with respect to the younger- generation devise.
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Subsection (c) is illustrated by the following examples:
Example 7. G’s will devised “$5,000 to my son, A, if he is living at my death; if not, to my daughter, B” and devised “$7,500 to my daughter, B, if she is living at my death; if not, to my son, A.” A and B predeceased G, both leaving descendants who survived G by 120 hours.
Solution: A’s descendants take the $5,000 devise as substitute takers for A, and B’s descendants take the $7,500 devise as substitute takers for B. In the absence of a finding based on affirmative evidence such as described in the solution to Example 1, the mere words of survivorship do not by themselves indicate a contrary intent.
Both devises require application of subsection (c). In the case of both devises, the statute produces a substitute gift for the devise to A and for the devise to B, each devise being an alternative devise, one to the other. The question of which of the substitute gifts takes effect is resolved by determining which of the devisees themselves would take the devised property if both A and B had survived G by 120 hours.
With respect to the devise of $5,000, the primary devise is to A because A would have taken the devised property had both A and B survived G by 120 hours. Consequently, the primary substitute gift is to A’s descendants and that substitute gift prevails over the substitute gift to B’s descendants.
With respect to the devise of $7,500, the primary devise is to B because B would have taken the devised property had both A and B survived G by 120 hours, and so the substitute gift to B’s descendants is the primary substitute gift and it prevails over the substitute gift to A’s descendants.
Subsection (c)(2) is inapplicable because there is no younger-generation devise. Neither A nor B is a descendant of the other.
Example 8. G’s will devised “$10,000 to my son, A, if he is living at my death; if not, to A’s children, X and Y.” A and X predeceased G. A’s child, Y, and X’s children, M and N, survived G by 120 hours.
Solution: Half of the devise ($5,000) goes to Y. The other half ($5,000) goes to M and N. The disposition of the latter half requires application of subsection (c).
Subsection (b)(1) produces substitute gifts as to that half for the devise of that half to A and for the devise of that half to X, each of these devises being alternative devises, one to the other. The primary devise is to A. But there is also a younger-generation devise, the alternative devise to X. X is a descendant of A, X would take if X but not A survived G by 120 hours, and the devise is one for which a substitute gift is created by subsection (b)(1). So, the younger- generation substitute gift, which is to X’s descendants (M and N), prevails over the primary substitute gift, which is to A’s descendants (Y, M, and N).
Note that the outcome of this example is the same as in Example 6.
Example 7. G’s will devised “$5,000 to my son, A, if he is living at my death; if not, to my daughter, B” and devised “$7,500 to my daughter, B, if she is living at my death; if not, to my son, A.” A and B predeceased G, both leaving descendants who survived G by 120 hours.
Solution: A’s descendants take the $5,000 devise as substitute takers for A, and B’s descendants take the $7,500 devise as substitute takers for B. In the absence of a finding based on affirmative evidence such as described in the solution to Example 1, the mere words of survivorship do not by themselves indicate a contrary intent.
Both devises require application of subsection (c). In the case of both devises, the statute produces a substitute gift for the devise to A and for the devise to B, each devise being an alternative devise, one to the other. The question of which of the substitute gifts takes effect is resolved by determining which of the devisees themselves would take the devised property if both A and B had survived G by 120 hours.
With respect to the devise of $5,000, the primary devise is to A because A would have taken the devised property had both A and B survived G by 120 hours. Consequently, the primary substitute gift is to A’s descendants and that substitute gift prevails over the substitute gift to B’s descendants.
With respect to the devise of $7,500, the primary devise is to B because B would have taken the devised property had both A and B survived G by 120 hours, and so the substitute gift to B’s descendants is the primary substitute gift and it prevails over the substitute gift to A’s descendants.
Subsection (c)(2) is inapplicable because there is no younger-generation devise. Neither A nor B is a descendant of the other.
Example 8. G’s will devised “$10,000 to my son, A, if he is living at my death; if not, to A’s children, X and Y.” A and X predeceased G. A’s child, Y, and X’s children, M and N, survived G by 120 hours.
Solution: Half of the devise ($5,000) goes to Y. The other half ($5,000) goes to M and N. The disposition of the latter half requires application of subsection (c).
Subsection (b)(1) produces substitute gifts as to that half for the devise of that half to A and for the devise of that half to X, each of these devises being alternative devises, one to the other. The primary devise is to A. But there is also a younger-generation devise, the alternative devise to X. X is a descendant of A, X would take if X but not A survived G by 120 hours, and the devise is one for which a substitute gift is created by subsection (b)(1). So, the younger- generation substitute gift, which is to X’s descendants (M and N), prevails over the primary substitute gift, which is to A’s descendants (Y, M, and N).
Note that the outcome of this example is the same as in Example 6.
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Example 9. Same facts as Example 5, except that both A and B predeceased the testator
and both left descendants who survived the testator by 120 hours.
Solution: A’s descendants take half ($5,000) and B’s descendants take half ($5,000).
As to the half devised to A, subsection (b)(1) produces a substitute gift to A’s descendants and a substitute gift to B’s descendants (because the language “or to the survivor of them” created an alternative devise in B of A’s half). As to the half devised to B, subsection (b)(1) produces a substitute gift to B’s descendants and a substitute gift to A’s descendants (because the language “or to the survivor of them” created an alternative devise in A of B’s half). Thus, with respect to each half, resort must be had to subsection (c) to determine which substitute gift prevails.
Under subsection (c)(1), each half passes under the primary substitute gift. The primary devise as to A’s half is to A and the primary devise as to B’s half is to B because, if both A and B had survived G by 120 hours, A would have taken half ($5,000) and B would have taken half ($5,000). Neither A nor B is a descendant of the other, so subsection (c)(2) does not apply.
Only if one were a descendant of the other would the other’s descendant take it all, under the rule of subsection (c)(2).
Technical Amendments. Technical amendments in 2008 added definitions of “descendant of a grandparent” and “descendants” as used in subsections (b)(1) and (2) and clarified subsection (b)(4). The two new definitions resolve questions of status previously unanswered. The technical amendment of subsection (b)(4) makes that subsection easier to understand but does not change its substance.
Reference. This section is discussed in Halbach & Waggoner, ‘The UPC’s New Survivorship and Antilapse Provisions,’ 55 Alb. L. Rev. 1091 (1992).
Historical Note. This Comment was revised in 1993 and 2008.
Solution: A’s descendants take half ($5,000) and B’s descendants take half ($5,000).
As to the half devised to A, subsection (b)(1) produces a substitute gift to A’s descendants and a substitute gift to B’s descendants (because the language “or to the survivor of them” created an alternative devise in B of A’s half). As to the half devised to B, subsection (b)(1) produces a substitute gift to B’s descendants and a substitute gift to A’s descendants (because the language “or to the survivor of them” created an alternative devise in A of B’s half). Thus, with respect to each half, resort must be had to subsection (c) to determine which substitute gift prevails.
Under subsection (c)(1), each half passes under the primary substitute gift. The primary devise as to A’s half is to A and the primary devise as to B’s half is to B because, if both A and B had survived G by 120 hours, A would have taken half ($5,000) and B would have taken half ($5,000). Neither A nor B is a descendant of the other, so subsection (c)(2) does not apply.
Only if one were a descendant of the other would the other’s descendant take it all, under the rule of subsection (c)(2).
Technical Amendments. Technical amendments in 2008 added definitions of “descendant of a grandparent” and “descendants” as used in subsections (b)(1) and (2) and clarified subsection (b)(4). The two new definitions resolve questions of status previously unanswered. The technical amendment of subsection (b)(4) makes that subsection easier to understand but does not change its substance.
Reference. This section is discussed in Halbach & Waggoner, ‘The UPC’s New Survivorship and Antilapse Provisions,’ 55 Alb. L. Rev. 1091 (1992).
Historical Note. This Comment was revised in 1993 and 2008.
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