DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 978 KB)
The Basic Laws of Inheritance When the Deceased Did Not Leave a Will

If a person passes away without leaving a will, the distribution of his estate is subject to a very specific system outlined by Halacha, which generally differs from the state laws regarding inheritance. We briefly outline here the basic rules of inheritance that apply when a person passes on without leaving a will:

1) A wife does not inherit her husband. According to the terms of the Ketuba, she is given a sum of money from the estate for her basic needs, and this money is given to her before the estate is divided among the inheritors, but she does not inherit her husband's assets.

2) If a person left behind sons, they inherit the entire estate, including both real and moveable property, and even charitable accounts that the father may have had. (We do not discuss here the special rights of the firstborn, which deserves fuller elaboration in a separate context.)

3) If a person had a son who had since passed away, the estate is given to that son's children. If the deceased had one living son and another son that had died, 50% of the estate is given to the live son, and the other 50% is distributed among the sons of the deceased son.

4) Daughters do not receive a share in the estate if the deceased had a son; single daughters, however, are given a certain sum from the estate until they get married. If the deceased never had sons but had a daughter, she receives the estate.

5) If a person died without any children, then he is inherited by his father. If his father is no longer alive, then his (father’s) children – the brothers or sisters of the deceased – receive the estate. If the father had no other children, then the estate is awarded to the grandfather; if the grandfather is no longer alive, then the estate is divided among his (grandfather’s) children, meaning, the uncles of the deceased. If the grandfather had no other children, then the estate is awarded to the great-grandfather, and if he is no longer alive, then the estate is divided among his children, or the deceased's great-uncles.

As mentioned, these laws apply only in a case where a person passed on without leaving a will; the laws governing wills will, please God, be discussed in a separate Daily Halacha.

See Hoshen Mishpat, siman 276. See the book- "Pure Money" by Dayan Cohen, pages 215-218.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
Situations Requiring Netilat Yadayim
Is A Person Required To Say Asher Yatzar Every Time If Using The Bathroom Excessively Due To An Illness
Should One Make Borei Nefashot First Before Asher Yatzar If Having Gone To the Bathroom Before Reciting Borei Nefashot
Is It Permissible To Answer Amen To Kadish, Nakdisach, or Barechu While Reciting Asher Yatzar
Does The Beracha of Me’en Shalosh Fulfill One’s Obligation If Said By Mistake Instead of Birkat HaMazon
Is One Required To Make Netilat Yadayim Before Eating Cereal and Before Dipping Crackers Into Butter
Does One Have To Repeat The Birkat HaMazon If He Is In Doubt If He Said Ritze VeChalitzenu on Shabbat
Birkat Hailanot
Netilat Yadayim When Waking Prior To Alot Hashachar
What Is The Proper Procedure Of Washing When Coming From The Bathroom And Eating Immediately Thereafter
Who Should Say The Hamotzih When Sitting Among Many People?
Is It Permissible to Say Hashem's Name in A Bathroom Or In A Mikveh
A Comprehensive Understanding of the Beracha of Asher Yasar
Yom Tov- The Proper Beracha for Aliyat Maftir on Shabbat Hol Hamoed
Treating Hol HaMoed Properly
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found