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Fiji Legislation |
LAWS OF FIJI
1978 Ed]
CHAPTER 59
WILLS
ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS
PART I-PRELIMINARY
SECTION
1.
Short title.
2.
Interpretation.
3. Application.
PART II-CAPACITY TO MAKE A WILL
4. Capacity
generally.
5. Property may be
disposed of by will.
PART III-THE EXECUTION AND MAKING OF WILLS
6.
Execution generally.
7. Publication
unnecessary.
8. Appointments
exercised by will.
9. Executor, not
incompetent witness.
10. Creditor
not incompetent witness.
11.
Witness to whom disposition made not incompetent as witness but disposition
void.
12. Alterations in wills.
PART IV-REVOCATION OF WILLS
13. Subsequent
marriage.
14. Will not revoked by
presumption
15. When will
revoked.
16. How revoked will
revived.
PART V-PRIVILEGED WILLS
17. Persons
entitled to make privileged
wills.
18. Making of a privileged
will.
19. Revocation of privileged
will.
PART VI-FORMAL VALIDITY OF WILLS
20. Application
and effect of this Part.
21. General
rule as to formal validity.
22.
Additional rules.
23. Ascertainment
of system of internal law.
PART VII-THE CONSTRUCTION OF WILLS
24. Change of
domicile.
25. When a devise not to
be rendered inoperative.
26. General
rules of construction.
27. Statutory
substitutional gift.
PART VIII-ADMINISTRATION OF ASSETS
28. Charges on
property to be paid primarily out of property
charged.
29. Rate of interest on
pecuniary legacies.
30. Contingent
or future gifts carry intermediate
income.
31. Clarification.
---------------------------------------------
Act No. 1 of 1972
AN ACT TO CONSOLIDATE AND AMEND THE LAW RELATING TO WILLS
[3rd March, 1972]
PART I-PRELIMINARY
Short title
1. This Act may
be cited as the Wills Act.
Interpretation
2. In this Act
unless the contrary intention appears-
"country" means any place or territory or group of places or territories having its or their own law of nationality or citizenship;
"disposition" includes a gift, devise, bequest or an appointment of property contained in a will; and "dispose of" has a corresponding meaning;
"internal law" in relation to any country or place means the law that would apply in a case where no question of the law in force in any other country or place arose;
"property" includes real and personal property or any interest therein and any thing or chose in action;
"will" includes a codicil and every other testamentary disposition.
Application
3. This Act
applies to all wills executed or made after it comes into operation except where
the contrary is expressed in this Act.
PART II-CAPACITY TO MAKE A WILL
Capacity generally
4. Subject to the
provisions of Part V, every person not less than eighteen years of age has
capacity to make a will.
Property may be disposed of by will
5. Every person
having by this Act capacity to make a will may by a will executed or made in
manner required by this Act dispose of
all his property and
of all property which in exercise of a
power of appointment he is entitled or able to dispose of by his will and may
also by his will
appoint a guardian of his infant children.
PART III-THE EXECUTION AND MAKING OF WILLS
Execution generally
6. Subject to the
provisions of Part V, a will is not valid unless it is in writing and executed
in the following manner:-
(a) it is signed by the testator or by some person in his presence and by his direction in such place on the document as to be apparent on the face of the will that the testator intended by such signature to give effect to the writing as his will;
(b) such signature is made or acknowledged by the testator in the presence of at least two witnesses present at the same time; and
(c) the witnesses attest and subscribe the will in the presence of the testator,
but
no form of attestation is necessary.
Publication unnecessary
7. Publication is
not necessary for the validity of a will.
Appointments exercised by will
8.-(1) An
appointment made by will in exercise of a power is not valid unless the will is
executed or made in manner required by this
Act.
(2) A will so far as it
exercises a power of appointment shall
not be treated as improperly executed by reason only that its execution was not
in accordance with any formal requirements contained
in the instrument creating
the power.
Executor not incompetent witness
9. A person named
as executor of a will is not on that account incompetent to be admitted as a
witness to prove the execution of the
will or the validity or invalidity
thereof.
Creditor not incompetent witness
10. Where by a
will property is charged with payment of a debt, a creditor whose debt is so
charged or the husband or wife of such creditor
is not on that account
incompetent to be admitted to prove the execution of the will or the validity or
invalidity thereof.
Person to whom disposition made not incompetent as witness but disposition void
11. A
disposition, other than a charge for payment of a debt, made in a will to a
person who or whose husband or wife is a witness to
the will, is void but the
witness is not, on that account, incompetent to be admitted to prove the
execution of the will or the validity
or invalidity thereof.
Alterations in wills
12. Except so far
as the words or effect of a will before an alteration are not apparent, an
alteration made in a will after the execution
thereof is invalid unless it is
duly executed in the manner required by section
6 by the signatures of the testator and
the witnesses, either in the margin or opposite or near the alteration in such
manner as to
indicate the intention of the testator that the will as altered was
to take effect, or to a memorandum written on the will and referring
to the
alteration and in either case the will as so altered shall be deemed to have
been duly executed.
PART IV-REVOCATION OF WILLS
Subsequent marriage
13. A will is
revoked by the subsequent marriage of the testator except a will made in
exercise of a power of appointment when the property
thereby appointed would
not, in default of such appointment, pass to his executor, administrator or the
person entitled in case of
intestacy:
Provided that a will expressed to
be made in contemplation of a marriage is not revoked by the solemnisation of
the marriage contemplated.
Will not revoked by presumption
14. A will is not
revoked by any presumption of an intention on the ground of an alteration in
circumstances.
When will revoked
15. Subject to
the provisions of Part V, a will or codicil or any part thereof is not revoked
otherwise than-
(a) by marriage, as provided by this Act;
(b) by another will or codicil executed in manner provided by this Act;
(c) by some writing declaring an intention to revoke the will, codicil or part thereof and executed in the manner in which a will is required by this Act to be executed; or
(d) by the testator or some person in his presence and by his direction, with the intention of revoking the will, codicil or part, burning, tearing or otherwise destroying the will, codicil or part.
How revoked will revived
16.-(1) Subject
to the provisions of Part V, a will or codicil or any part thereof that has been
in any manner revoked is not revived
otherwise than by the re-execution thereof
or by a codicil executed in manner required by this Act and showing an intention
to revive
the will, codicil or part.
(2) When any will or codicil that
has been partly revoked and afterwards wholly revoked is revived, the revival
does not, unless the
contrary intention appears by the will, extend to so much
of the will or codicil as was revoked before it was wholly revoked.
PART V-PRIVILEGED WILLS
Persons entitled to make privileged wills
17. The following
persons irrespective of age have capacity to make a will and also to revoke a
will with or without making a new will:-
(a) any person, whether as a member or not, serving with any of Her Majesty's Forces or any allied forces while in actual military, naval or air service during a war declared or undeclared or other armed conflict in which members of such forces are engaged;
(b) any person who is a mariner or seaman serving at sea.
Making of a privileged will
18. A will made
by a person to whom the provisions of section 17 applies need not be executed in
the manner required by section 6 but
may be made, without any formality, by any
form of words, whether written or spoken, if it is clear that he thereby
intended to dispose
of his property after his death.
Revocation of privileged will
19. Any person who has made a will at a time when this Part applied to him may, after this Part ceases to apply to him and while still under the age of eighteen years, revoke such will by any manner of revocation provided in this Act other than by the making of another will.
PART VI-FORMAL VALIDITY OF WILLS
Application and effect of this Part
20.-(1) This Part does not apply to a will of a testator who died before the date of commencement of this Act, but does apply to a will of a testator who dies after that date whether the will was executed before or after that date.
(2) The provisions of this Part shall take effect
notwithstanding any other provisions of this Act.
General rule as to formal validity
21. A will shall be
treated as properly executed if its execution conformed to The internal law in
force in the place where it was executed,
or in the place where, at the time of
its execution or of the testator's death, he was domiciled or had his habitual
residence, or
in a country of which, at either of those times, he was a citizen
or national.
Additional Rules
22. Without
prejudice to the provisions of section
21, the following wills shall be
treated as properly executed:-
(a) a will executed on board a vessel or aircraft of any description, if the execution of the will conformed to the internal law in force in the place with which, having regard to its registration, if any, and other relevant circumstances, the vessel or aircraft may be taken to have been most closely connected;
(b) a will so far as it disposes of real property, if its execution conformed to the internal law in force in the place where the property was situated;
(c) a will so far as it revokes a will which under this Part would be treated as properly executed or revokes a provision which under this Part would be treated as comprised in a properly executed will, if the execution of the later will conformed to any law by reference to which the revoked will or provision would be so treated;
(d) a will so far as it exercises a power of appointment if the execution of the will conformed to the law governing the essential validity of the power.
Ascertainment of system of internal law
23.-(1) Where
under this Part the internal law in force in any country is to be applied in the
case of a will, but there are in force
in that country two or more
systems of internal law relating to the
formal validity of wills, the system to be applied shall be ascertained as
follows:-
(a) if there is in force throughout the country a rule indicating which of those systems can properly be applied in the case in question, that rule shall be followed; or
(b) if there is no such rule, the system shall be that with which the testator was most closely connected at the relevant time and for this purpose the relevant time is the time of the testator's death where the matter is to be determined by reference to circumstances prevailing at his death and at the time of execution of the will in any other case.
(2) In determining for the purposes of
this Part whether or not the execution of a will conformed to a particular law,
regard shall
be had to the formal requirements of that law at the time of
execution of the will, but this does not prevent account being taken
of an
alteration of law affecting wills executed at that time, if the alteration
enables the will to be treated as properly executed.
(3) Where a law in
force outside Fiji falls, whether in pursuance of this Part or not, to be
applied in relation to a will, any requirement
of that law whereby special
formalities are to be observed by testators answering a particular description
or witnesses to the execution
of a will are to possess certain qualifications,
shall be treated notwithstanding any rule of that law to the contrary, as a
requirement
of form only.
PART VII-THE CONSTRUCTION OF WILLS
Change of domicile
24. The construction
of a will is not altered by reason of any change in the testator's domicile
after the execution of the will.
When a devise not to be rendered inoperative
25. A transfer or
other act, other than an act by which the will is revoked as provided in this
Act, made or done subsequently to the
execution of a will of or relating to any
property therein comprised, does not prevent the operation of the will with
respect to
such estate or interest in that property as the testator had power to
dispose of by will at the time of his death.
General rules of construction
26. Unless the
contrary intention appears by the will-
(a) a will is to be construed, with reference to the property comprised in it, to speak and take effect as if it had been executed immediately before the death of the testator;
(b) property which is the subject of a disposition which is void or fails to take effect is to be included in any residuary disposition contained in the will;
(c) whether or not the testator owns freehold land a general devise of land or of land at a particular place includes leasehold land;
(d) a general disposition of all the testator's property or of all his property of a particular kind includes property over which he had a power of appointment exercisable by will and operates as an execution of the power;
(e) a disposition of property without words of limitation whether to a person beneficially or as executor or trustee is to be construed as passing the whole estate or interest of the testator therein.
Statutory substitutional gift
27.-(1) Unless a contrary intention appears by the will, where any person is a child or other issue of the testator to whom (whether as a named or designated person or as a member of a class) any property is devised or bequeathed or appointed in terms which would enable that person to take the property for any estate or interest not determinable at or before the death of that person if that person survived the testator (whether before or after the testator makes the will) shall die in the lifetime of the testator leaving any child or children living at the time of the death of the testator, the devise or bequest or appointment takes effect as if the will had contained a substitutional gift devising or bequeathing or appointing the property to such of the children of that person as are living at the time of the testator's death and if more than one in equal shares.
(2) Without limiting the manner in which a testator may show an intention to negative the operation of the provisions of subsection (1), it is hereby declared that that subsection does not apply-
(a) to a devise or bequest or appointment to any person that is in any way expressed to be conditional on the person being alive at or after the time of the death of the testator or any time or event which in the events that happen is subsequent to the time of the death of the testator; or
(b) to a devise or bequest or appointment to a person that is in any way expressed to be conditional on the fulfilment by that person of any other contingency and that contingency has not been fulfilled before the time of the testator's death.
(3) This section does not apply to
-
(a) any specific legacy or specific appointment of any chattels; or
(b) any devise or bequest or appointment to any person as one of two or more joint tenants.
(4) In this section-
"appointment" means an appointment made by will in exercise of a general power of appointment; and also means an appointment made by will in exercise of a special power of appointment in every child in whose favour this section would operate is an object of the power; and the terms "appointed" and "appointing", have corresponding meanings;
"chattels" does not include money or securities for money;
"child"-
(a) in relation to a testator, means any child (whether legitimate or illegitimate) of the testator;
(b) in relation to any person to whom any property is devised or bequeathed or appointed as mentioned in this section, means a legitimate child of that person; and also, in relation to any woman, includes any illegitimate child of that women;
"issue" in relation to a testator, means any issue (whether legitimate or illegitimate in any generation) of the testator.
(5) For the purposes of this
section, an illegitimate relationship between a father and his child shall not
be recognized unless there
is proof that the paternity of the father has been
admitted by or established against the father while both the father and child
were living.
PART VIII-ADMINISTRATION OF ASSETS
Charges on property to be paid primarily out of property charged
28.-(1) Where by
his will a testator disposes of an interest in property which at the time of his
death is charged with the payment
of money whether by way of mortgage, charge,
lien or otherwise and the testator has not by the will or be a deed or other
document
signified a contrary or other intention, the interest so charged is
primarily liable for payment of the money secured by the charge,
and
every part of such interest shall bear
a proportionate part of the charge on the whole.
(2) Such contrary or
other intention is not deemed to be signified-
(a) by a general direction for the payment of the debts, or of all the debts, of the testator out of his personal estate, or his residuary real and personal estate, or his residuary real estate; or
(b) by a charge of debts on any such estate;.
unless such intention is further signified by words expressly
or by necessary implication referring to all or some part of the
charge.
(3) Nothing in this section affects the right of the person
entitled to the charge to obtain payment or satisfaction thereof either
out of
the other assets of the testator's estate or otherwise.
Rate of interest on pecuniary legacies
29. The rate of
interest payable on pecuniary legacies is five per cent per annum unless some
other rate is directed by the will or by
a judgement or order of the court
directing an account of legacies and such interest shall commence to run from
the expiration of
twelve months from the date of death of the
testator:
Provided that in the case of a pecuniary legacy amounting to
satisfaction of a debt such interest shall commence to run from the date
of
death.
Contingent or future gifts carry intermediate income
30. A contingent
or future specific or residuary devise or bequest of property, and a specific or
residuary devise or bequest of property
upon trust for a person whose interest
is contingent or executory, carries the intermediate income of that property
from the date
of death of the testator, except so far as the income may be
otherwise expressly disposed of.
Clarification
31. For the purpose of avoiding doubt, it is hereby declared that, where there is no express provision to the contrary in this Act, any provision or rule of law existing and relating to wills at the commencement of this Act shall remain in force.
Controlled by Ministry of the Attorney-General
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