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High Conflict Family Law
Chapter 733 of the Florida Statutes, titled “Administration of Estates,” governs probate administration. The administration of an estate is the legal distribution of a person’s assets and the payment or resolution of their liabilities in probate court after they pass away. Administration of an estate will be either “testate” or “intestate”. An estate is testate if the decedent passed away with a valid Last Will and Testament in place. An estate is intestate if the decedent passed away without a Last Will and Testament or if a decedent’s Will is subsequently determined to be invalid. Florida’s intestate laws provide a default process to distribute a decedent’s property that is not properly devised by a Will. Florida’s intestate succession statutes designate certain individuals as heirs of intestate estates and specify how the assets of such an estate are to be distributed. Intestacy succession may be whole or partial. For example, partial intestate succession will occur if a person passes away with a Will but it does not dispose of all of his or her assets. In that situation the terms of the Will control the distribution of the assets included (testate succession) and the assets not included or addressed by the Will are distributed pursuant to Florida’s intestate succession statutes.
In Florida, there are two types of probate administration proceedings: Formal administration and Summary administration. Formal administration is required when the decedent’s estate is valued at more than $75,000. Summary administration is a simplified form of probate used for estates whose assets do not exceed $75,000 or when the decedent has been deceased for more than two years. In contrast, no administration or formal proceeding is required if a decedent’s estate leaves only personal property exempt under the provisions of §732.402; this process is known as disposition without administration. The following is a simplified version of the probate process.
Opening an estate includes:
Closing the estate includes:
If you are in need of a qualified Probate attorney, contact the law offices of Hertz • Sager, online through this website, or at 305.444.3323.