What Happens When Someone Dies Without a Will?
Do you ever wonder what would happen to your belongings if you suddenly died and didn’t have a will? Well, in New Jersey you would have died intestate, and an intestacy system that governs how estates and probate assets are settled when there’s no will would kick in. This system sets forth intestate succession guidelines and intestacy statutes.
However, these intestacy laws remain fact-specific, meaning there is no one-size-fits-all formula for intestacy distribution. Rather, estate distribution varies depending on family makeup specifics, such as your marital status, the existence of parents or siblings, and the number of children.
Fortunately, not all your assets will go through this administration if you die intestate. Some of what you acquire during life automatically passes outside a will. Such assets include the following:
- Your spouse has the right to survivorship for a home that you owned jointly. Tenancy by the entirety or joint tenancy allows the surviving person to assume real estate ownership upon your death.
- A person with the right of survivorship will inherit a bank account that you own jointly. Also, an account in your name and payable-on-death bank accounts with named beneficiaries can also bypass probate.
- Proceeds of a life insurance policy will go to the named beneficiary.
- A 401K, IRA, OR company pension plan with named beneficiaries.
- Revocable living trust's assets.
The above assets go to the named beneficiaries or anyone with the right of survivorship upon your death. However, if the survivor or beneficiary dies before you, the above assets go to your estate and are distributed according to New Jersey's intestate laws. The same goes for any assets that were owned solely by you, such as bank accounts without beneficiaries, personal property such as furniture and jewelry, or any vehicles without a shared deed. The New Jersey law provides a guideline on how to distribute assets in the decedent's name alone as follows:
- A surviving spouse with children from the same marriage, with no stepchildren or children from a prior marriage, will inherit the entire estate if you die. The same goes if your spouse survives you and you have no children.
- A surviving spouse and your children from a prior marriage: The spouse will inherit 25% of any property (but not less than $50,000 or more than $200,000), plus one-half of any estate balance. Your children inherit the rest.
- A surviving spouse and surviving parents: The spouse will inherit 25% of any property (but not less than $50,000 or more than $200,000), plus three-fourths of any estate balance. Your parents inherit the remaining property.
- If your parents survive you because you die without a spouse or children, your parents inherit everything.
- If you have siblings but no surviving spouse, children, or parents, then your siblings inherit everything.
- Your estate can go to distant relatives such as grandparents, aunts and cousins with no immediate family members. However, if there is no surviving member in your bloodline, the estate is escheat, and the State of New Jersey assumes ownership of your property.