Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. May 1, 2012 · The testator/testatrix must be capable of understanding the nature of the act of making a will and its consequences. (i.e. the person understands what a will is, when it comes into effect, that it can be changed at a later date, the role of the executor, etc.) b) The testator/testatrix must be capable of understanding the extent of his/her estate.

    • K.M. Kennedy
    • 2012
  2. Any person who makes a will can be called a testator, regardless of the person’s gender, but the word testatrix refers specifically to a female testator. If you are a woman and prefer to refer to yourself in your simple will as a testatrix, you may do so by finding and replacing every instance of the word testator with the word testatrix.

  3. People also ask

  4. A testator is someone who has made a last will and testament (referred to as simply "a will"). A testatrix is the female equivalent for testator, although testator is broadly used to encompass all genders. You aren't likely to come across this term outside of will and legacy documents or statutes. Executors, trustees, testators, and guardians ...

  5. Get the Testator/Testatrix legal definition, cases associated with Testator/Testatrix, and legal term concepts defined by real attorneys. Testator/Testatrix explained.

  6. The definition of a testatrix is a woman who makes a will. Testatrix was a term used when testator referred to a man who made a will. Just as society now refers to all actors as actors rather than calling female actors actresses, it is now common to refer to all people who make wills as testators. BACK TO PROBATE ALBERTA GUIDE.

  7. Definition & Citations: A woman who makes a will; a woman who dies leaving a will; a female testator. Find the legal definition of TESTATRIX from Black's Law Dictionary, 2nd Edition.

  8. The further research should be done to investigate the gender aspect of an implementation of a testator/testatrix’s communicative goal in the texts of English Last Wills and Testaments. These findings suggest that further research should be conducted to assess Last Wills and Testaments from the view point of philosophy and psychology.