Limitation Period

The Rights of a Surviving Spouse – Spousal Election

I just finished watching Mrs. America, the recent TV series that chronicles the fight by women in the 1970s to enshrine the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) in the US Constitution. First proposed in 1921, the ERA sought to mandate equality between men and woman. In 1972, Congress passed the ERA, but they could not obtain […]

Dependant’s Relief Claims, Estate Administration, Estate Litigation, Forms of Relief, In The News, Limitation Period, Other Claims & Remedies Against Estates, Spousal Elections, Valuation of Estate Assets

Am I a Dependant? Can I Receive Support From the Estate?

Generally speaking, everyone is free to decide who will inherit their property after their death. This is called testamentary freedom. However, this right is not absolute; the law in Ontario (and elsewhere in Canada) imposes limits on testamentary freedom in certain circumstances, and in particular, where the will of the deceased excludes or fails to

Court Procedure, Dependant’s Relief Claims, Estate Litigation, Forms of Relief, Limitation Period

Clash of the Limitation Periods

The Limitations Act, 2002, SO 2002, c 24, Sch B, brought order and clarity to limitation periods in Ontario. However, the Limitations Act did not displace all existing limitation periods established by statute. Several carve-outs which are particularly relevant to estates litigators includes the Real Property Limitations Act, RSO 1990, c L.15 and s. 38(3)

Advice to Executors and Trustees, Estate Litigation, Limitation Period, Other Claims & Remedies Against Estates, Will Challenges

But Everything’s Depending on the Way the Wind May Blow [1]

Can an estate trustee move to strike a beneficiary’s Notice of Objection to Accounts in the face of their Application to Pass Accounts, based on any of the Limitations Act, 2002, and/or laches and acquiescence? This was the discreet, though important, issue considered by the Ontario Superior Court of Justice in Wall Estate, 2018 ONSC

Contested Passing of Accounts, Estate Administration, Estate Litigation, Limitation Period, Passing of Accounts
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