Glossary for Being an Executor

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Revision as of 17:29, 27 January 2017 by Drew Jackson (talk | contribs)
This information applies to British Columbia, Canada. Last reviewed for legal accuracy by Helen Low, QC in January 2016.
Assets
What the deceased owned. Assets can include things such as money, land, investments, and personal possessions such as jewelry and furniture.
Beneficiary
A person designated to receive money or property in a will, benefit plan, or insurance policy.
Debts
What the deceased owed at death. These may include credit card balances, loans, and mortgages. Also called “liabilities.”
Estate
All of the property and belongings owned by the deceased, with some exceptions. The estate does not include property owned with someone else jointly (such as a joint bank account) or property which has a designated beneficiary (such as an insurance policy).
Estate administrator
A person appointed by the court to take charge of an estate where the executor is unable or unwilling to act, or there is no valid will.
Executor
The person named in a will to carry out the instructions in the will and settle the will-maker’s affairs after they die.
Intermeddled
To interfere in the affairs of others. In the context of an estate, to deal with the assets or liabilities of the deceased.
Probate
A legal procedure that confirms a will is legally valid and can be acted on. It allows financial institutions and others to rely on the will as being the last will made by the deceased.
Renounce
To decline an appointment as executor.
Residue
The residue of the estate is whatever is left over after the executor pays all the debts and expenses and distributes any specific gifts.
Trust
A part of the estate that is set aside in the will to provide ongoing income for a beneficiary, often a child.
Will
A legal document that leaves instructions about what the person making the will wants done with their assets and obligations after they die.
Will-maker
A person who makes a will.