EXCEPTIONS
TO PROBATE
Some persons die owning assets that can be transferred to heirs
or others without probate court proceedings and without having
a trust.
Usually these are exceptional circumstances and involve items
of property of very little value.
Yet
a person could die owning only motor vehicles valued at less than
$60,000 and the ownership can be transferred without proceedings
in the probate court. There are several special statutes that
make these exceptions. Some are not a part of the new probate
code.
This article will explain these special exceptions to probate.
Most
people own one or more motor vehicles at the time of death. Some
are very expensive. A special law found in the Motor Vehicle
Code provides for the transfer of motor vehicles to heirs of
the decedent owner without probate court involvement.
There
are some conditions for this to be done. The most important is
that upon the motor vehicle owner’s death, the decedent
had no other estate to be probated. That is, if a personal
representative will be required to administer other estate assets,
this method of
transfer of ownership of the motor vehicles cannot be used.
Secondly,
the total value of all the vehicles cannot exceed $60,000.
Note that it is not the value of a single vehicle. Rather, all
motor vehicles
titled in the decedent’s name alone are added together
to make a maximum of $60,000. If they total more than $60,000,
all vehicles
must be included in a probate of the estate. MCL
257.236.
The
transfer is made at the Secretary of State office where
motor vehicle registration
and licensing occurs. Proof of death is required and
that usually is done with a certified copy of the death certificate.
The heir
must complete a certification form supplied by the Secretary
of State that certifies the applicant is the surviving
spouse
or heir of the
decedent registered owner.
Upon
proper petition, the Secretary of State will issue a new certificate
of title to the proper person. The
vehicles can
only be transferred
to a surviving spouse and if there is no surviving
spouse then to an heir of the owner in the order specified
in
the
Estates
and Protected
Individual’s Code.
Another
interesting law not found in EPIC concerns boats, or watercraft,
as the
statute so states. This law
permits the transfer of one or more watercraft having
a total value of $100,000 or less without having
probate court proceedings. MCL
324.80312.
As with
motor vehicles, the decedent owner must have died owning no other
assets requiring probate.
The transfer can be made
first to the surviving spouse. If there is none,
then next
to an heir
of the decedent owner in the order specified in
EPIC.
The
person with the priority to have the ownership of decedent’s
watercraft applies for the transfer at the Secretary
of State office for motor vehicle transfers. As with motor vehicles,
proof of death
and of the right to receive the new title is
required. The process is essentially the same for both.When a person
dies while employed,
the decedent’s final paycheck, and sometimes
fringe benefits, must be paid to someone. There
is a special law providing for this
circumstance. MCL
408.480.
An employer
must pay fringe benefits on behalf of a deceased employee
according to any written contract,
policy, or plan of the employer. An employee
can designate the person to whom unpaid wages
and fringe benefits are to be paid after the
employee’s death.If there is no contract,
policy or plan or the decedent employee did not
designate a person to receive the unpaid
wages and fringe benefits, then the employer
is authorized by this law to make the payments
without probate court proceedings.
The
unpaid wages and fringe benefits are first payable to the surviving
spouse. If there
is none, then it
is paid to
decedent’s surviving
children. If there are none, it will be paid
to decedent’s
surviving mother or father. If none, it will
be paid to decedent’s
surviving sister or brother. If none, then
some probate court order will be required.
More
information on this topic can be found
at the
Calhoun
County Courts Probate Notes site.
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