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160 Sentences With "probated"

How to use probated in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "probated" and check conjugation/comparative form for "probated". Mastering all the usages of "probated" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Ms. Lee's will is expected to be probated in Monroeville within the next few weeks.
If you go that route, it can work like a will but your estate will not be probated, Behrendt said.
When the will was probated, his estate was worth around half a million dollars—almost four million in today's money.
She convinced him to move the stocks into a custodial brokerage account, so each stock would not have to be probated separately.
She received a two-year probated sentence, and was ordered to complete 40 hours&apos community service, write two letters of apology and pay a $500 fine.
Here's the thing: If you were a renter and your assets consist of a commemorative spoon collection and some threadbare "Star Wars" bedsheets, your "estate" doesn't need to be probated.
There is usually a waiting period for a will to be executed after someone dies, so leaving your pet without a care plan for weeks or months while the will is probated leaves the pet in limbo.
In a complaint filed with the Superior Court in the U.S. Virgin Islands, where Epstein's estate is being probated, Maxwell said she "had no involvement in or knowledge of -Epstein's alleged misconduct," but the financier repeatedly promised to support her financially.
D'Adrien Anderson, 6900, will serve an additional six-month jail term probated for two years, and is required to pay a $2628,28503 fine and $22020,565 in restitution to Blue Bell Creameries, which forced the company to discard all products inside the freezer after Anderson uploaded a video of the incident to social media, according to The Associated Press.
Hartford Courant, p. 6. was the largest probated in New Britain that year.67 Estates Probated Valued above $25,000. (1961, January 1).
Dowell was unmarried as of his death, and his will was probated at £10,314 11s. 5d.
Brodnax died on October 23, 1834 and his will was probated in Dinwiddie County in December 1834.
Prosecutions are handled by the Commission's Chief Disciplinary Counsel. The most severe disciplinary penalty is disbarment. Lesser sanctions are time-limited suspensions, which may be probated or probated in part. Appeals may be taken to the Board of Disciplinary Appeals (BODA) and ultimately to the Texas Supreme Court.
His widow died in March 1967.Her will is in the official list of wills probated in 1967.
His will, probated in January 1798, indicated that his service ended aboard HMS Bellerophon, a ship of the line.
They had eight children, but several are presumed to have died before him. His will was probated April 15, 1736.
He was buried at Tisbury, Wiltshire. His will (dated 7 January 1641/2 to 14 May 1643) was probated on 27 November 1648.
John Larkin's will is among Charlestown Records. He amassed a large fortune before he died in 1807. His estate was probated for $86,381.99.
At her death in 1988, she left £94,117,964 (equivalent to £ million in ), the largest probated estate to that date in England and Wales.
On April 19, 1675 he made out his will and died before October 20, 1675 when his will was probated at the county court.
Library Archives, New England Conservatory of Music Her Will (probated in Davidson County, Tennessee), provides two address: 1897 – Boscobel College, Nashville; January 1899 – Oxford, Mississippi.
While walking back from Sunday church services on 10 March 1968, Laycock suffered a massive heart attack and died. His estate was probated at £279,910.
The date of his death is unknown, but his will, dated 12 August 1777, was probated in the city of Philadelphia on 25 September 1781.
In his will dated 28 January 1606 and probated in 1609, Lumley settled the bulk of his estate on his cousin and heir male, Richard Lumley, 1st Viscount Lumley.
Additionally, the will of William Phelps' mother Dorothy in Tewkesbury, probated on May 5, 1617, mentioned a brother-in-law, Edward Phelps. His will in turn, probated on July 1, 1637, named as overseer of his estate his nephew, William Phelps, likely placing William Phelps of Tewkesbury in England and not across the Atlantic in the Massachusetts Bay. More recent expert research has identified William Phelps of Crewkerne, Somersetshire, England as the immigrant.
In 1694, he returned to the military as field officer of Calvert County, becoming Colonel in 1702. Before 1700, Dorsey moved to Major's Choice. His will was probated in 1705.
In his will, Merryman left his entire estate, valued at approximately $40,000, to his wife Mabel."Merryman Will Probated Here", Herald and News, Klamath Falls, Oregon, 20 May 1948, p. 2.
When his will was probated on 22 March of that year, the total value of his effects was £6859 9s 11d. His great-great-grandson named Jack Carter attends Boston College.
Gascoigne composed his will on 23 August 1661. This will made no mention of Elizabeth, suggesting she had predeceased him at that point, but disparaged his ward, John at length for apparently causing his financial troubles. The will was probated by his landlady Frances Dimmock on 24 March 1664, who was also named as his executor and residuary legatee. His date of death is not known, but must have been between when his will was composed and probated.
Burdett died aged 61 circa 1647. He was buried at Repton, Derbyshire. His will was probated on 22 May 1647. His son Francis (10 September 1608 - 30 December 1696) inherited the baronetcy.
William Glascock died prior to December 23, 1793, the date on which his will was probated. He is buried in Magnolia Cemetery in Augusta, Georgia along with his second wife, Elizabeth, and a grandson.
In 1849, the chief surveyor of the Canterbury Association, Joseph Thomas, named Lake Forsyth for him. On his death he was buried in Brookwood Cemetery in Surrey. His will probated at £18,667 in 1899.
" Lexington Herald-Leader. April 11, 2000. Retrieved on October 11, 2010. " Lexington's most prominent conspiracy theorist, Lester Coleman, was sentenced yesterday to 10 years for passing fraudulent checks but the prison term was probated.
Henry Lee II also served as a member of the State Senate in 1780. Henry's will was dated August 10, 1787, and was probated in Prince William County on October 1 of the same year.
It was during this role he visited, with his wife, the 1939 New York World's Fair in August. Popham died 15 April 1947 and his will was probated on 31 October 1947 in London, England.
She left the considerable residuary estate to her husband.The Times, 6 May 1913, p. 11, reporting on "Probated Will of Helen Boulter" The D'Oyly Carte Opera Company continued to operate continuously until 1982.Skow, John.
Howard's prior criminal convictions were burglary of a motor vehicle (6-year probated sentence) and 45-day jail sentence for theft. At the time of the crime, Howard was 19 years old and on probation.
She was the daughter of John Stewart (MP). His brother, John Wynne, also played first-class cricket. He died on 3 March 1874 at 4 Rue Solferino, Paris, France. His estate was probated at £35,000.
It was because of this that he was termed "the scholar". Richard was a supporter of the Established Church. Richard died March 12, 1714 at "Machodoc", Westmoreland County. His will was probated on April 27, 1715.
22 years old, was "under the tuition of Mons. Brezy, at Utretcht", in August 1716, and took the name of Sheffield, instead of Herbert.Under the will of John Sheffield, dated 2 August 1716, and probated 28 March 1721 .
Cassel died at Brook House, Park Lane, London. His body was buried in Kensal Green Cemetery in front of All Souls' Chapel (Anglican). A few months after his death, Cassel's estate was probated at £6,000,000 (equivalent to £ today)..
She subsequently married a distant British relation of Benning's, Michael Wentworth. Because of the direct property transfer from Governor to widow by will, the contents of the house were not probated or inventoried at the time of his death.
By the time of his death, he was the last Victorian-era British Prime Minister alive. His estate was probated at £1,500,122 3s. 6d.; () and he was thus the richest prime minister ever, followed by Salisbury, then by Palmerston.
Lord Southwark died in February 1929, aged 85, his estate probated in the London Registry at £21282 12s 2d (). The barony became extinct on his death. Causton married in 1871 Selina Mary Chambers, daughter of Sir Thomas Chambers QC, MP for Marylebone.
Howard 1987, pp. 361–362. He is buried in the churchyard of the parish church of St Mary the Virgin in Saffron Walden (see image). His will was probated at £748,789 (21 October 1982) (over £2.3m at 2014 prices).Matthew 2004, p. 207.
Cafritz died in 1964 of a heart attack. When he died, his estate was the largest ever probated in the District of Columbia. It took lawyers and IRS agents 4 years to settle the estate, which was valued in 1968 at $66 million.
For this he and family received small payments from time to time from the estate. He died in 1722.Will of John Dann (probated Sept. 20, 1722) (London Metropolitan Archives, Archdeaconry Court of London: Register of Wills, microfilm reel 9051/12, fol. 2).
She also held the office of Groom of the Stole and Lady of the Bedchamber to Henrietta Maria, then the Queen-Mother. She died without issue c. 3 September 1667 at Colombes, France. Her will (dated 2 September 1667) was probated on 20 November 1667.
Manning died on 4 January 1892, at which time his estate was probated at £3,527. He received a formal burial at St Mary's Roman Catholic Cemetery in Kensal Green. Some years later, in 1907, his remains were transferred to the newly completed Westminster Cathedral.
Cecil died in 1663, between 20 January and 17 July, when her will was signed and probated, respectively. Thomas Cecil reserved a space for her in his monument at Westminster Abbey, but Frances chose instead to have her grave in the floor of Winchester Cathedral.
Cobbs died about late 1655 or within the first few days of 1656, his will was probated January 15, 1656.Henrico County Wills, BK. A. January 15, 1656. His home-site was later sold to the Bolling family who used the name "Cobbs Hall" for their estate.
Francis J. McKiernan, in Breifne Journal. Vol. I, No. 3 (1960), pp. 247-263 there were two Hearth Tax payers in Maken- James Ferrish and William Sharpe. The will of John Faris of Mackan, County Cavan dated 1 November 1745 was probated on 31 January 1745.
His will was not probated until 1857 and her new acquisitions were recorded in his name. Harriet became a prominent planter in her own right. In 1860, thirteen Thomas County plantations produced over 100 bales of cotton. Harriet Blackshear had the record with 235 bales produced by slave workers.
By the time he had inherited, he had already become a lunatic. He died unmarried in Enfield and so his title passed to his half- brother George Cadogan, 3rd Earl Cadogan. He was buried at Chelsea on 3 January 1833 and his will was probated in July that year.
25; Law died later that same year in London at the age of 65. His funeral was held at Westminster Abbey where later his ashes were interred. His estate was probated at £35,736 (approximately £ as of ). Bonar Law was the shortest-serving Prime Minister of the 20th century.
Augustus Agar died on 30 December 1968 and was buried in Alton Cemetery. His will was probated at 9,580 pounds sterling on 28 March 1969. His second wife, Ina, attended HMS Dorsetshire reunions after his death. His Victoria Cross is displayed at the Imperial War Museum, London, along with his telescope.
Bayard Cutting died on March 1, 1912, due to complications from heart disease. He was 62 years old and buried in the family vault at Greenwood Cemetery in Brooklyn. After his death, his widow, Mrs. Olivia Cutting, inherited over $9 million from his estate when it was probated in 1913.
The distribution to the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel was made in two payments. One was for 62 pounds, 17 shillings, 5 pence. The second was for 43 pounds, 4 shillings, and 10 pence. His will had been written on 4 August 1751 and probated on 26 October 1751.
He was married to Margaret Rawlings Lupton. They had a son, John T. Lupton II. They lived in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Unlike his father or son, he was known for being a recluse. At the time of his death, his $200 million (USD) estate was the largest ever probated in the South.
After the Restoration Willis was banned from court, but no other punishment was imposed, presumably in recognition of his previous service. Having taken a wife of considerable means, he enjoyed a comfortable retirement with his family at Fen Ditton, where his will, dated 16 to 20 May, was probated 10 December 1690.
He inherited, on the death, 30 October 1735, of the 2nd and last Duke (at his age of 19), the considerable estates of both of these Dukes, in Lincolnshire and elsewhere. He was created a baronet on 1 March 1755. He died 5 September 1774.Will of Charles Sheffield probated July 1775 .
Following his wife's death, Parsons acquired sole ownership in Wappocomo plantation. After his death on January 25, 1847, his will, dated November 7, 1846, and probated February 22, 1847, devised Lot Number 21 including Wappocomo (referred to in the will as the Casey Tract) to his son Colonel Isaac Parsons (1814–62).
He was Grand Master of the Sussex branch of the Freemasons from 1902. He died with assets excluding family-entrusted land such as at Goodwood House where he lived (and as his forebears was a parochial and district patron). These were probated at £310,380.England and Wales Calendar of Probates, 1928, page 79.
During the last 15 years of his life, Stanley gave over £80,000 to education projects. Most of his estate was bequeathed to trade schools and students in south London. Stanley's will was signed on 20 March 1908, and was probated on 26 October 1909. When he died, his wealth was £58,905 18s. 4d.
Although Travers never fully accepted the way the Disney film version of Mary Poppins had portrayed her nanny figure, the film did make her rich.Valerie Lawson, Mary Poppins, She Wrote: The Life of P. L. Travers, 2005, p. 270-74. The value of Travers' estate was probated in September 1996 at £2,044,708.
McMurdo achieved command of HMS Contest in 1846, which was detailed to the coast of west Africa. He retired as a rear-admiral but was promoted in retirement to vice-admiral in 1873. McMurdo died at Cargenholm, Troqueer Parish, Kirkcudbrightshire on 11 December 1875. His estate was probated in Dumfries 3 February 1876.
Barrington married Joan Cromwell, who died around 1641 with will probated on 14 December 1641, daughter of Sir Henry Cromwell and was therefore uncle by marriage to the future Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell. They had nine children, four sons and five daughters. Barrington was succeeded in the baronetcy by his oldest son Thomas.Noble, pp.
By 1959, Saint Cyr was afflicted with Parkinson's disease, and was unable to care for himself. His foster son H. R. Friss was named as his conservator. Attempts to contact relatives in California and Texas received no response. When he died November 3, 1966, the will that was probated had been executed in 1949.
He was followed in death several months later by Rose. Morley's estate was probated at £59,765, a surprising sum for a self-made man who devoted his life to writing and politics. Morley inspired many leading figures of the 20th century, including Mahomed Ali Jinnah, the founding father of Pakistan.Stanley Wolpert, Jinnah of Pakistan.
He was a Deputy Lieutenant of Nottinghamshire (1937–1948) and served the county as a Justice of the Peace (1933–1948). In 1948 the Duke migrated to Southern Rhodesia, where his daughter Patricia was born. At the point of his death in 1988 his usual address was 5 Quay Hill, Lymington and he held net (probated) assets of £3,163,807 ().
"Surratt, Mary E. Jenkins (1823–1865)" in Women in the American Civil War, p. 533; Larson, p. 37-38. The loss of John Jr.'s job as postmaster caused a financial crisis for the Surratt family. When John Sr.'s estate was probated in late November 1862, the family owned only two middle-age male slaves.
Andrews died of pneumonia at the Hotel Brighton in Atlantic City, New Jersey, on April 14, 1904. He had fallen ill just seven days earlier. His funeral was held in Cleveland, and he was temporarily interred in the Wade Chapel receiving vault at Lake View Cemetery. The will, probated in New Jersey, gave his fortune to his wife, Mary.
Taliaferro, p. 115. In December 1899, Russell's father Charles Silas Russell gave the couple $500.Taliaferro, p. 128. The estate of Mary Mead Russell, Russell's mother who died in 1895, was finally probated shortly thereafter, and in the spring of 1900 the Russells began building a new home on the corner of 13th Street and 4th Avenue North.
Peter Hampson Ditchfield, The Parish Clerk, London, Methuen, 1907; pp. 115-26. Thomas Cotes was survived by two sons, James and Thomas. The exact date of his death is not recorded; he was buried on 15 July 1641. His last will and testament was signed on 22 June 1641 and probated on 19 July the same year.
In return, she gave up the right to inherit personal property, which would be used to help pay taxes. The settlement did not disturb the provisions of the will donating the Patterson Mansion and its contents to the Red Cross, but did allow the will to be probated and the deed transferred."Patterson Will Case Is Settled." Washington Post.
Boyd died on 28 August 1628, aged 33. His will was dated 17 October 1623, probated 7 May 1632. His widow, an ardent Presbyterian, born between 1588 and 1594, died "very comfortably" at the house of her daughter Lady Scott, of Ardross, in the parish of Elie, shortly before 22 January 1646 and was buried on 6 February.
She was also one of the county's larger rice producers and she raised 5000 bushels of sweet potatoes. Food crops were also required to feed not only her family, but the slaves who worked the land. The 1840 census recorded 43 male and 59 female slaves. When James Joseph's will was probated in 1857, it listed 161 slaves by name.
On the day of his death he had been driving with a lady friend around Assiniboine Park. He was struck by a heart attack while returning along Academy Road. When C. H. Enderton died in 1920, he left an estate of $1,200,000. This was the largest estate probated in Manitoba since the death of Donald A. Smith, Lord Strathcona, in 1914.
Merryman, a Republican, entered state politics in 1904 when he was elected a delegate representing Klamath County at Oregon's state Republican convention."Merryman Will Probated Here", Statesman Journal, Salem, Oregon, 8 April 1904, p. 3."State Ticket Up", Morning Oregonian, Portland, Oregon, 15 April 1904, p. 10. Two years later, he decided to run for a seat in the Oregon House of Representatives.
He died at Bristol, 17 January 1955, aged 64,Death certificate from General Register Office, Sub-district of Bristol North in the County Borough of Bristol after a long illness, and was cremated at Arno's Vale crematorium.Bristol Evening Post, death notice 18 January 1955. He left no will.He does not appear in the official list of wills probated in 1955.
On January 10, 2011, after a sentencing hearing, the judge sentenced DeLay to three years in prison on the charge of conspiring to launder corporate money into political donations. On the charge of money laundering, he was sentenced to five years in prison, but that was probated for 10 years, meaning DeLay would serve 10 years' probation. Dick DeGuerin was DeLay's defense attorney.
He lived at Rockwood, Strabane, County Tyrone, Ireland. His only child was Philip Laurence John Stanhope (8 December 1857 – 1 September 1860). George Stanhope, 8th Earl of Chesterfield, died on 19 October 1883, aged 60, at Killendarragh, Lifford, County Donegal, Ireland, without surviving issue. His will was probated on 22 March 1884 at Derry, County Londonderry, Ireland, at under £4,500.
In 1947, Barrowman retired due to ill health. A new highway to Port Swettenham, Malaya was named Barrowman Road after his retirement. Barrowman died on 31 January 1978 in Elstree and Potters Bar Registration District leaving a Will which was probated on 19 April 1978 in Winchester. There is an obituary in the British Medical Journal, 1978, i, p. 514.
There are no primary sources as evidence for this claim. Robert was visiting Benenden, Kent, the next door village to Rolvenden, where his brother, Richard, lived until Richard died in March 1623/24. Richard Couchman left a will probated in 1624 (PRC/17/65/443, Benenden). The will left a bequest to the children of "brother in lawe Stephen Everenden" (also Evernden).
He went into active service during World War I and was injured in that conflict in October 1917. He died in a hospital in France as a result of those injuries on 9 October 1917. On 31 December 1917 his will was probated by his wife. As he left no issue, his younger brother, Christopher Vane, 10th Baron Barnard, inherited the title in December 1918.
In 1770, he inherited 150 acres of land from his paternal grandfather Youell Sanford Sr. Ancestry.com: "Youell Sanford in the Westmoreland County, Virginia Wills, 1654-1800 (probated on 27 Nov 1770)", paid subscription site, accessed March 10, 2017. He rose to become a General in the American War of Independence. Following the Revolution, he settled in Kentucky where he had been granted land, in 1792.
John Marwick, Extracts from the Burgh Records of Edinburgh: 1573-1589 (Edinburgh, 1882), p. 525. The tomb is located in St. Anthony's aisle and was carved by John Roytell and Murdoch Walker. Her will was probated on 9 August 1591. Agnes Keith was attended in her illness in Edinburgh by the physicians and surgeons Gilbert Primrose and John Craig and the apothecary Thomas Diksoun.
Frances was born in 1539, one of the 19 children of Sir John Newton, Knight, of Barrs Court, Gloucestershire and East Harptree, Somerset, who lived in Gloucestershire and died before November 1568 with will probated on 17 November. Her mother was Margaret Poyntz, a daughter of Sir Anthony Poyntz and Elizabeth Huddersfield. Sir John Newton's surname was originally Cradock and he was of Welsh origin.
Clarke health "had been failing for some time", according to the BAA, before he died on 23 September 1862 at Easton, at the age of 63, having published his last communication to the BAA a year earlier. His wife survived him and he was buried at Church of All Saints, Easton, where his gravestone was engraved with a final stanza of his "doggerel rhyme". His will was probated at £1500.
At his death Thomas was a rich man, which can be seen from the large sums he was able to leave as gifts to friends and his servants, many of whom are named in the will. It was a long way from the poor Cistercian monk of Netley. He must have died shortly after making his will, which was probated by the Archbishop of Canterbury in London on 9 September 1550.
The Surrogate's Courthouse in Manhattan The Surrogate's Court of the State of New York handles all probate and estate proceedings in the New York State Unified Court System. All wills are probated in this court and all estates of people who die without a will are handled in this court. Unclaimed property of the deceased without wills is handled by the Judge of this court. It also handles adoptions.
Thomas Bell was one of Stephen F. Austin's colonists, having moved to Texas in 1824 although one record has him entering the colony as early as 1822. He was a soldier during the Texas Revolution and received bounty land for participating in the Siege of Bexar. He and his brother James Bell later donated the land upon which the town of Bellville, Texas was built. His will was probated in Austin County, Texas.
Bullitt died at his home in Fauquier County, Va., in February, 1778, at the comparatively early age of forty-eight years. His will, dated September 17, 1775, was probated February 23, 1778 (Will Book I, p. 321, Fauquier County). In his will, he left 400 acres and an annual allowance for support to his illegitimate daughter, Sarah Elizabeth Brounaunt, or Bronaugh, and most of the balance of his estate to his brother, Judge Cuthbert Bullitt.
5 No. 18 (April 1929), pp. 146-8. Dring's date of death is not known; his last will and testament was dated September 12, 1668, and was probated on December 21 of that year. He was survived by two sons, Thomas and Joshua.Henry Robert Plomer, A Dictionary of the Booksellers and Printers Who Were at Work in England, Scotland and Ireland from 1641 to 1667, London, The Bibliographical Society/Blades, East & Blades, 1907; p. 66.
On April 9, 1821 Bryant T. Nolan was appointed constable of the Lamine Township by the Cooper County Court. The first will probated by Cooper County was that of Thomas McMahan, a resident of the Lamine Township in 1821. Turley Bridge over the Lamine River in Lamine was built in 1906 and replaced in 1937 [ ]. One span of the bridge was sold to Boone County, Missouri and is on Moon Valley Road Hinkson Creek Trail [ ].
His wife Mary (née Stanton) wrote her will on 2 October 1761 and was probated on 18 February 1762 in Prince George's County, Maryland. In her will she styled herself as "widow of The Rivirend Mr. Jacob Henderson, late of Prince George's Co. decd." Among her bequests were ones to her "son-in-law" [step-son] Robert Tyler and to Daniel Stanton, son of my brother Daniel Stanton (my sd. nephew lately living in Philadelphia).
Dey subsequently performed renovations and minor alterations to the first floor plan to enable continued use as a private residence. Under subsequent ownership the house was placed on the National Register of Historic Placeson October 26, 1979. The property came under threat as the estate of the late Sandford Cole was being probated during the peak of a highly speculative real estate market in 2007.Property Tax Records Accessed March 6, 2010.
By the time her will was probated in 1973, her estate was valued at $10,000,000. In her will, she left a major bequest to establish, in honor of her brother-in-law, another noted author, the Charles Macomb Flandrau Fund at Harvard University, aimed to encourage good writing. Her gift to the University of Arizona led to the construction of the Flandrau Science Center and Planetarium in Tucson, Arizona, opening in 1975.
Harrelson was tried for the 1968 murder-for-hire killing of Sam Degelia Jr., a resident of Hearne, Texas. Harrelson was paid $2,000 ($ in 2020) for the murder of Degelia, a grain dealer and father of four who was killed in McAllen, Texas. His first trial ended with a deadlocked jury, although Pete Scamardo was also tried in the case, found guilty of being an accomplice to the murder,"Scamardo Given Probated Term". The Abilene Reporter- News.
All seven juveniles entered guilty pleas and received seven-year probated prison- sentences. The twenty-first and last defendant pleaded guilty after a year long investigation whereby a DNA specimen identified him as being at the crime scene. The defendant received a reduced seven-year sentence in exchange for pleading guilty to indecently exposing himself to a child. All defendants sentenced to prison would be registered as sex offenders for ten years after completing the sentence.
Deighton's will left everything to his four-year-old son, but Richard died in November 1875 before the will was probated. It is not known who inherited the $304, but Quahail- ya/Madeline was reimbursed for three months of childcare and the expenses of her son's funeral."Will throws light on life of Gassy Jack", _The Province_ , May 29, 1962, page 1 She returned to the North Shore and married Billy Williams, who died in 1897.
Rene Guzman was born on September 20, 1937, and was 33 years old at the time of the murders. Before the murders, he had received a four-year probated sentence for robberies by assault in Jim Hogg and Hidalgo counties in 1959. His probation was revoked in 1961, and he served time in prison until 1963. He was later found guilty of burglary in Hall and Swisher counties and was given a 10-year sentence for the burglaries.
Strasbourg, 17 March 1556), and Bridget Hussey (c. 1526 – 13 January 1600/1601, bur. Watford, Hertfordshire, will dated 2 June 1600, probated 12 January 1600/1601), who married secondly before 1563 Henry Manners, 2nd Earl of Rutland, without issue, and thirdly, as his second wife Francis Russell, 2nd Earl of Bedford on 25 June 1566, also without issue. Bridget was a daughter of John Hussey, 1st Baron Hussey of Sleaford by second wife, Lady Anne Grey.
This led to Rice selecting Baker as his personal attorney and a guardian of his education foundation. He defended Rice's estate against a will probated under his second wife's signature. He helped New York authorities unravel the murder conspiracy executed by Rice's personal valet and an attorney, and provided evidence critical to their convictions, all while defending the Rice estate against two major challenges. He served as a trustee for the Rice Institute for five decades.
The location was Parkman's Market, in the West End, near Mungo Mackay's mansion house. Boston newspapers carried an announcement of the loss of Master Mariner G. D. Mackay in the editions of December 16, 1824. At the time of his death he was the Master of the schooner Hayti.Boston papers citation G. D. Mackay's will, which had been written in 1823, and probated in 1825, inventoried many items of interest to piano manufacturing in the United States.
His coffin lay in state at Westminster Hall for three days and the funeral ceremony was at St Paul's Cathedral. Afterwards, the coffin was taken by boat along the River Thames to Waterloo Station and from there by a special train to the family plot at St Martin's Church, Bladon, near his birthplace at Blenheim Palace. On 9 February 1965, Churchill's estate was probated at £304,044 (equivalent to £ in ) of which £194,951 (equivalent to £ in ) was left following payment of death duties.
His eldest son, Robert, who was then 27 years of age petitioned the General Court for damages in the amount of £100 in accordance with a law just previously enacted in the Colony. This may have been the first claim of that sort in New England. His will was probated on September 16, 1648, and his estate appraised at a value of £135. Edmund Ingalls is recognized as an early American founder by The Order of the Founders and Patriots of America.
The Lucas family were established in Ireland when Colonel Benjamin Lucas, Charles' great-uncle, was granted lands in County Clare following the Cromwellian conquest of Ireland in the early 1650s. Charles Lucas was the younger son of Benjamin Lucas of Ballingaddy, County Clare. Benjamin Lucas died about 1727, leaving £937 to his family, of which Charles was to receive £80.Will of Benjamin Lucas of Ballingaddy, probated 1728, Prerogative Will Book 1726-28, National Archives of Ireland, 10/2/3, folios 309a-b.
His death notice was published in the UC Gazette four days later. His will, #57, is located in the Ontario Archives on reel #MS638. His eldest son Alexander died on February 7, 1831 and John McGregor's will was then probated by his second son Duncan and George Jacobs, both of Chatham, Ontario. On October 10, 1821, he was sworn in as a J.P. at the Court House in Sandwich and served in session during that year through to December 31, 1821.
It is not known precisely when he died—it was sometime between the date of his will, 20 October 1643, and the date that his will was probated on 5 June 1644. E. F. Atwood provides a transcript of his will in Ye Atte Wode Annals, and his wife Ann is named his sole executrix "to whom I will and bequeath all the rest of my estate". His will was witnessed by William Bradford and Robert Hicks. His wife, Ann (Lee) died in 1654.
The Second Charter of Virginia, Primary Sources: Workshops in American History Retrieved 11 February 2013. Wolley made his last will 11 August 1609, adding a codicil on 1 November, six days before his death at Pyrford. In the will, which was probated on 12 December, he bequeathed £4,000 for a ‘fair tomb’ to be built in Old St Paul's Cathedral for himself and his parents, and the large sum of £1,300 to various servants. He left the manor of Burgham to his illegitimate daughter, Mary Wolley.
Firmin V. Desloge died December 18, 1929. His estate was settled in 1932, valued at more than $52 million ($ today).Probated will of Lydia Desloge, source Farmington (Missouri) Press, December 1932 He was one of the wealthiest men of that era, alongside W. K. Vanderbilt ($52 million) and A. W. Mellon ($50 million), but only half as wealthy as the Astors ($100 million).List of the Richest Men in the World, New York Times, May 20, 1923, accessed by ProQuest Historical Newspapers, via St. Louis County Library.
This bill of sale also mentions two more children, Emeline (Nancy Adeline) and Lewis. At the time of purchase in 1844 Syphax was aged about 26 and his wife Letty was about 30. This deed of sale was witnessed by John Hasten, who had to confirm this in court in April 1845. The estate files of Thomas Adams were probated in 1848. According to the Slave Schedule of 1850, Darius owned one male slave who was reported to census takers as being 37 years old.
In 1680 Sergeant Clement Weaver is known to have deeded 90 acres of his grant in East Greenwich to his son Clement, also known as Captain Clement Weaver. The Clement Weaver House built in East Greenwich in 1679 is still in existence. It is the oldest documented dwelling house in Kent County and one of the oldest homes in Rhode Island.List of the oldest buildings in Rhode Island Sergeant Clement Weaver died in Newport in 1683, as his will was probated in that year.
Traditionally, the representative of an intestate estate is called an administrator. If the decedent died with a will, but only a copy of the will can be located, many states allow the copy to be probated, subject to the rebuttable presumption that the testator destroyed the will before death. In some cases, where the person named as executor cannot administer the probate, or wishes to have someone else do so, another person is named administrator. An executor or an administrator may receive compensation for his service.
Beginning in 1656 Wilbur held a number of important positions within the colony, including Commissioner, Deputy to the General Assembly, Assistant to the Governor, and Captain in a Troop of Horse. He wrote his will in August 1678, though it was not probated until more than three decades later. Wilbur was held in high esteem within the colony and was one of a small group of men named in the Royal Charter of 1663, signed by King Charles II of England, and becoming the guiding document of Rhode Island's government for nearly two centuries.
To be valid, witnesses must not be heirs under the will. In 1911, wills of soldiers and sailors were privileged, as in England. In modern U.S. law, wills are not required to be registered prior to death in most states, but are registered and put in the public record after the person making the will dies and the estate is probated. However, it is often still a good idea to have the signing and witnessing of a will notarized, to reduce the risk of disputes over the will's validity after death.
His will was probated March 14th, 1788 (Source National Archives) and contains an affidavit signed by Thomas Parry 'of Billiter Lane', suggesting that Thomas was tutored to be a merchant under the guidance of his uncle, alongside his cousin Gilbert Ross Jr. Upon Gilbert Ross's death, the London business was inherited by Gilbert Ross Jr. (1755-1815), who later married Elizabeth Parry, Thomas' sister. Thomas found no role in the London business, so he left London in 1788, most likely as an agreed strategy of the two cousins to expand into India.
He was given additional time to make the weight limit, but made no attempts to cut further. Instead, he was fined 20 percent of his fight purse, which went to Sage Northcutt. On October 15, it was announced that Treviño tested positive for marijuana in post-fight tests. If Treviño was found by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation's enforcement division to have violated its rules, he would face a one-year probated suspension, in which he can still fight provided he does not break any more rules, or a full one-year suspension.
He missed the second half of a playoff loss to the Los Angeles Rams with a pulled muscle in his right leg. On April 8, 1987, Septien was indicted after pleading guilty to a charge of indecency with a child and received a 10-year probated sentence. On April 15, he was released by the team and later replaced with Roger Ruzek. Septien led the Cowboys in scoring in each of his nine seasons with the team, making 162 field goals in 226 attempts and scoring 388 PATs.
Burke's Landed Gentry of IrelandBurke's Irish Family Records Roger Elliott never fully recovered from his various wounds and died at Byfeld on 16 May 1714. He was buried 21 May in the cemetery of St Mary the Virgin, Barnes. His will was probated on 16 November 1714 but his estate took years to resolve because of the difficulties mentioned. The eventual resolution was mostly thanks to the involvement of his father-in-law, William 'the Laceman' Elliot, who sought to expedite his daughter's remarriage to Captain Thomas Burroughs.
It was through one of the latter, Julia Mary (1860-1931), who married as her first husband Hugh Tyrwhitt, that he became grandfather of the composer Lord Berners.Article on Lord Berners by Mark Amory, who wrongly titles William Orme Foster 'Sir' though latter was never knighted or became a baronet. William Orme Foster died at Apley Hall on 29 September 1899, aged 84, and was buried on 5 October at Stockton. His estate was probated at £2,588,000, and he left his fortune to his son William Henry Foster.
On the charge of money laundering, DeLay was sentenced to five years in prison, which was probated for 10 years, meaning DeLay would have had to serve 10 years' probation. Dick DeGuerin, DeLay's defense attorney, appealed his conviction to the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals, which heard oral arguments on October 10, 2012.Laylan Copelin, "DeLay sentenced to 3 years in prison", Austin American- Statesman, January 10, 2011. On September 19, 2013, two Republican judges on a Texas appeals court overturned Delay's convictions, 2-1, ruling the evidence was legally insufficient to sustain his convictions.
TARUN BHARAT (www.tarunbharat.net) Nagpur, Saturday, 28 April 2012PUNNYA NAGARI (Marathi language daily published at Nagpur) Friday 8 June 2012 An unusual holographic will, accepted into probate as a valid one, came out of a tragic accident. On 8 June 1948 in Saskatchewan, Canada, a farmer named Cecil George Harris became trapped under his own tractor. Thinking he would not survive (though found alive later, he died of his injuries in hospital), Harris carved a will into the tractor's fender, which read: The fender was probated and stood as his will.
In light the intense public scrutiny over the trial, the judge refused to grant Barnes a new trial and be forced to conduct an extraordinary search for an unbiased jury.Alexander, 169 After her win in Louisiana court, Gaines found more success in her subsequent appearances before the Supreme Court. By the time the Court heard Patterson v. Gaines (1848), it had already determined that Gaines had a cause of action. Gaines argued she was Clark's legitimate heir not only under the 1813 will but also the 1811 will, which was the only will the court probated.
As the State of Louisiana had passed an anti-miscegenation law in 1894 forbidding marriage between whites and non-whites, Chennault had been informed by his lawyer that his marriage to Anna was illegal in Louisiana, and to ensure his will was respected, Chennault—who lived in Monroe, Louisiana—had his will probated in Washington, D.C.Forslund, Catherine Anna Chnnault: Informal Diplomacy and Asian Relations, New York: Rowman & Littlefield, 2002, pp. 40–41. Claire P. Chennault, one of Claire Lee's sons, was a U.S. Army Air Force and then U.S. Air Force officer from 1943 to 1966 and subsequent resident of Ferriday, Louisiana.
On 6 July 1790, Eliott died at the Schloss Kalkofen, Aachen, of palsy / stroke, allegedly brought on by drinking too much of the local mineral water, and was initially buried in the grounds of the Schloss.Stadtarchiv, Aachen (courtesy of Frau Nicole Brillo) His personal estate was probated by 27 July and his furniture sold off by his heirs. Later in 1790, his body was disinterred and reburied at Heathfield, East Sussex. Later still, his body was again disinterred and reburied at St Andrew's Church, Buckland Monachorum, Devon in the church associated with his wife's Drake ancestry.
In December, they appeared before the county's superior court, with all pleading guilty. James MacKay, who would later serve as a Representative from Georgia, spoke on behalf of the accused. The presiding judge accepted the guilty pleas, imposed fines of up to $200, and sentenced them to between 2 and 3 years in prison, though all sentences were eventually suspended or probated. Additionally, all men were barred from ever visiting the Atlanta Public Library again, several were required to leave Atlanta (with several of these men required to live with family members), and many had to report to church officials.
He protested his innocence but lacking funds to defend himself he was committed to Newgate Prison where he died suddenly, a week later, at the age of 49. His personal estate, then worth £750, was insufficient when his will was finally probated in 1891. His heir, a nephew, refused to inherit because he did not want to accept the conditions of changing his own surname to De Moleyns and living for one in every four years in County Kerry. Under the will the money passed to University College, London for purpose of endowing a professorship in electrical science.
In 1989, Gesell was the presiding judge in the government's case against National Security Adviser Oliver North, who was convicted of aiding and abetting obstruction of a congressional inquiry into the Iran-Contra arms sale. North also was convicted of ordering the destruction of documents and accepting an illegal gratuity. On July 5, 1989, Gesell probated North's three-year prison sentence, but fined him $150,000, sentenced him to 1,200 hours community service and placed him on two years' probation. These convictions, however, were subsequently vacated by an appeals court, because North had been granted immunity for his testimony to Congress.
Lord Grey married after 1572 Jane Sibella Morrison, who died in July 1615 and whose last will was dated of 6 March 1614/1615 and probated on 14 July 1615. She naturalized as an English subject in 1575/1576, and was the widow of Edward Russell, Baron Russell, whom she married c. 1571; he died before June 1572 without issue and intestate (his estate was administered on 30 June 1572) and was buried at Chenies, Buckinghamshire, son of Francis Russell, 2nd Earl of Bedford and Margaret St John. Jane's parents were Sir Richard Morrison of Cashiobury, Hertfordshire (d.
In 1975, a Houston judge declared Rogers legally dead so his estate could be probated. The case still remains officially unsolved and Rogers remains the only suspect. Houston forensic accountant Hugh Gardenier and his wife Martha have continued to investigate the case and concluded that Rogers did murder his parents and was later killed in Honduras. While they have dismissed John R. Craig and Philip A. Rogers's claim that Rogers was a CIA operative due to a lack of evidence, they admit that Rogers did have dealings with contract workers for the CIA when he worked as a seismologist.
Another woman who bore ten children was disqualified, for several were illegitimate.) The longest known legal will is that of Englishwoman Frederica Evelyn Stilwell Cook. Probated in 1925, it was 1,066 pages, and had to be bound in four volumes; her estate was worth $100,000. The shortest known legal wills are those of Bimla Rishi of Delhi, India ("all to son") and Karl Tausch of Hesse, Germany, ("all to wife") both containing only two words in the language they were written in (Hindi and Czech, respectively). The shortest will is of Shripad Krishnarao Vaidya of Nagpur, Maharashtra, consisting of five letters ("HEIR'S").
Richard Bertie was from an unusually humble stock for the connections he made. He was the son of Thomas Bertie (ca. 1480-bef. 5 June 1555), Captain of Hurst Castle and a master mason, and Aline Say. His paternal grandfather Robert Bertie (died 1501/2Robert Bertie's last will is dated 4 October 1501; it was probated 17 February 1501/1502.) was also a stonemason at Bearsted, Kent, and was married to one Marion, by whom he had two more children, a daughter Joan Bertie and a son William Bertie, born after 1480.John Harvey, English Mediavel Architects: a biographical dictionary down to 1550 (London, U.K.: Alan Sutton, 1984), p.
In 1667, he enlisted in a Troop of Horse, and nine years later, in 1676, during King Philip's War, he held the title of Captain. That same year he was a member of a Court Martial held at Newport where certain Indians were charged with complicity in King Philip's designs. As one of the esteemed members of the Rhode Island colony, Wilbur was one of a select group of men named in the Royal Charter of 1663, signed by England's King Charles II, and becoming the foundation for Rhode Island's government for nearly two centuries. Wilbur's will was dated 21 August 1678, though not probated until more than three decades later.
In 1839 the will of Brigadier-General John Floyd was probated in Camden County Georgia Inferior Court. Charles Rinaldo Floyd, Richard Ferdinand Floyd and Everard Hamilton qualified as Executors. General John Floyd wrote it in 1833, six years before his death. He bequeathed his lands, including Bellevue Plantation, a few slaves, out buildings, tenements, appurtenances, all physical property, including the townhouses owned in St. Marys, cash and bonds, to his wife, Isabella Maria Floyd, with the proviso that nothing was to be sold during her lifetime unless it was for payment of debts, and after her death, all property would revert into the Estate.
Nicholas Anthony LaHood was born on September 16, 1972 to Judge Michael Thomas LaHood Sr. and Norma Olivia (née Mendiola) in San Antonio, Texas. LaHood was arrested in June 1994 for attempting to sell 200 ecstasy pills worth $3,600, with a firearm to an undercover police officer at a strip club. At the time of his arrest, he was in his third year at San Antonio College and working at a nightclub. LaHood entered into a plea bargain in August 1994 and was given deferred adjudication, a probated $1,000 fine and ordered to perform 320 hours of community service. In 1996, LaHood’s brother Michael was killed in his driveway.
Firmin V. Desloge (née Lydia Holden Davis) Probated will of Lydia Desloge, source Farmington (Missouri) Press, December 1932the original, fully executed bequest documents in the possession of the Missouri Historical Society Archives, St. Louis, MO, Joseph Desloge Collection Roman Catholic Archbishop John Glennon laid the cornerstone of the hospital on June 22, 1931, and consecrated the chapel on November 9, 1933. In 1952, the funeral of the founder's son, Firmin V. Desloge II, was held at the chapel.The Desloge Chronicles, by Christopher D Desloge, 2011 In 1998, Saint Louis University sold the Chapel, along with the Hospital, to Tenet Healthcare Corp., a for-profit chain based in Dallas.
They had gone no more than 4 or 5 miles before he could tell from the smoke columns that the Indians were burning everything. Guinard had left his will in the safekeeping of Major Bullock at Ft. Laramie, having no way at the time to get it probated or secured in a bank. He later filed claim to be compensated for Indian depredations but Major Bullock told him the will was lost or destroyed. Unable to produce the will, the case dragged on in the courts for more than 25 years before it was finally abandoned and Guinard was never compensated for his losses.
A commonly cited example is tax protests in the United Kingdom in the 1970s when taxpayers would print their cheques on rigid boards measuring approximately 3 feet by 1½ feet. An often- cited example is a Canadian farmer who, while trapped under his own tractor, carved a holographic will into the tractor's fender. The fender was probated and stood as his will, and is currently on display at the law library of the University of Saskatchewan College of Law.On Campus News, January 23, 2009: The Last Will and Testament of Cecil George Harris In Jewish law a get can be written on any durable material, including the horn of a cow.
According to the Monongalia County tax records, there is some indication that there was a smaller house on the land when Philip Harner bought it in 1850. Following the trail of early tax records the land was called the Costolo Place; a Samuel Costolo had owned it in 1839 then sold it to James Johnson who sold it to Caleb Dorsey. Dorsey sold it to Harner in 1859. The Harners farmed the land. Much of the Harner property was divided among his sons before his death,Will of Philip William Harner, Will filed in Monongalia County, West Virginia on August 26, 1885 and probated on December 30, 1885.
She later sees a woman from one of her nightmares at the local church, but her fears are assuaged by the Reverend Winston. Once the house is finally probated to Jane, Pritchard confirms to Jane that her aunt Rebecca worshipped Satan, and that upon her death, the hearse carrying her body crashed on the nearby road, but both the driver of the hearse, along with Rebecca's body and her coffin, inexplicably disappeared. Since this event, locals have been haunted by the image of the hearse. Meanwhile, Jane continues her romance with Tom, and after a date, invites him into her home, where they have sex.
Bartlett died in January 1903, she left a substantial bequest to the Orphanage. Her Will probated on January 22, 1903, set forth "… the remainder of my estate of every kind, character … I give, bequeath and devise to J.M. Dockeny, Elica H. Porter, John Quenton, John W. Dillard and Thos. B. Turley, as trustees – and to their successors in trust, … I direct that this fund shall be used … for the care and maintenance of orphans … whether orphaned by the death of one or both parents…." In 1904, in recognition of her generosity and the services of her late brother, the Home's name was changed to the Porter Home and Leath Orphan Asylum.
Jeremiah Rushmore died 28 October 1828. His will and codicil, dated 1826 and 1828, respectively, and probated in November 1828, stipulated that his son Morris was to inherit the farm he was living on in Coxsackie and that Richard would inherit the Athens farm. The will confirms that the second half of the house had been constructed before Jeremiah's death, in that it specified that his wife, Martha, and unmarried daughter, Anna, could continue to live in his "new house" and use the upper (first floor) room and two bedrooms upstairs. In the codicil Rushmore specified that his daughter was not permitted to enter the old house.
She was born Fanny Weston Bixby in Los Angeles, California, the youngest of nine surviving children of Jotham Bixby and Margaret Hathaway Bixby. Jotham had arrived in California in 1852 from Maine, where he and several cousins had formed Flint, Bixby & Company, which acquired major landholdings, including the 27,000-acre Rancho Los Cerritos in what is now Long Beach. Fanny grew up wealthy, and although she was an active philanthropist, when she died in 1930 her $2.5 million estate was the largest ever probated in Orange County up to that point. Fanny grew up on Rancho Los Cerritos, of which Jotham was the manager.
In the United States, research finds that between 0.5% and 3% of wills are contested. Despite that small percentage, given the millions of American wills probated every year it means that a substantial number of will contests occur. As of the mid-1980ss, the most common reason for contesting a will is undue influence and/or supposed lack of testamentary capacity, accounting for about three quarters of will contests; another 15% of will contests are based on an alleged failure to adhere to required formalities in the disputed will; the remainder of contests involve accusations of fraud, insane delusion, etc.Schoenblum, Jeffery A. (1987). "Will Contests—An Empirical Study", 22 Real Prop Prob &Tr.
She and her daughter, Katherine Anne Collymore, were the recipients of a bequest from Renn Phillips in his 1809 will. In 1824, when Robert died, he bequeathed she and her eleven children, full title to Lightfoots and the slaves working on the plantation. Among her children, besides Katherine were Frances Lasley, Margaret Jane, and Robert (baptized 18 February 1792), Thomazin Ashby (baptized 6 June 1795), Elizabeth Clarke (baptized 13 June 1798), Samuel Francis Collymore, Jackson Brown Collymore and Renn Phillips Collymore, who would become the great-great grandfather of Frank Collymore. Collymore's will, dated 1826 (or 1829 but which was probably the date the estate was probated), left her estate, worth over £10,000 to relatives.
Michail Mueller's will was probated in Los Angeles on July 7, 1894. In this document, Mueller left the subject property, with its existing building, to his daughter-in-law, Nettie Mueller, his granddaughter, Clara E. Mueller, and his two grandsons, Charles C. Mueller and Earl Mueller. According to the chain of title for the subject property, the Muellers and their descendants would retain ownership until the mid-1980s. In May 1913, the Metropolitan Fireproof Building Company was granted a City of Los Angeles building permit for the subject property to "remove present buildings for the purpose of erecting a new building".Building permit 7077, issued to Metropolitan Fireproof Building Company, May 22, 1913.
Gravesite of Pittock and his wife, Georgianna Having briefly lost control of the paper during the 1870s, and narrowly escaping bankruptcy during the depression of 1877, Pittock continued to manage his newspaper, maintaining long hours in his office until days before his death in Portland. Stricken with influenza, he was reported to have had himself carried to an east bay window of his mansion, to look once more at the vista across the city where he had made and broken careers, and amassed a fortune. The next night, January 28, 1919, he died leaving the largest estate which had yet been probated in Oregon, valued at $7,894,778.33, equivalent to $ today. Pittock was buried at River View Cemetery in Portland.
Ritchie into taking the blame for the theft of her own box, because the will shows that she has stolen dividends from a copper mine Clark had bought and not applied the funds to Toby's upbringing and education as instructed by Alonzo Clark, who was her second cousin. She didn't realize that the will had been probated and existed in file copy at the courthouse. The night before Toby's impending trial, all of those who supported him have a big party in which they reveal to him his true inheritance and that the case against him has been dismissed. Holbrook has developed his reputation and generated some income based on the case, and invites Toby to become his clerk.
Nigel intends to use the money as colleratal to mount a hostile takeover of Trumpers. However, Sir Raymond Hardcastle had foreseen the possibility, and added a clause to his will allowing for two years to find a different legitimate heir before his estate was probated. Charlie and his staff work diligently to try to find one with no luck, until, close to the closing date, Daphne overhears it, and tells both Charlie, Becky, and their attorney's that looking in England was a waste of time. They begin looking in Australia, and eventually piece together that Cathy Ross was the legitimate daughter of Guy Trentham and his wife (who he murdered and was hung for).
In his will, which was probated in October following, he left bequests to his widow Reana (his second wife), each of his eight children, something to the new college (Harvard) then building at Cambridge, and to George Alcock, a student. Emma's father, John Frost Brown, for many years a leading bookseller in Concord, was an ardent lover of beauty, whether in nature or art. During her girlhood, as she took long outdoor tramps with him, he taught her to note the changing beauties of sky and land and sea, which in later years she was skilful in reproducing on canvas. During his busy life, he collected a large library of valuable books.
It is unknown how he came to own the land upon which Locust Grove sits; family tradition holds that he received it from local planter James Anderson, who had been the father of his first wife, Susannah.The probated copy of Anderson's will does, in fact, state that a portion of his land was to be allotted to Susannah and her husband upon her father's death; while it explicitly mentions the amount of land to be given, it does not mention a location. It would seem likely that Locust Grove was constructed on the land which the couple received in the will; no definitive proof, however, exists. In any event, he lived there with his second wife, Catherine Brooke, with whom he raised four children.
Following the death of James Gregg Parsons on January 25, 1847, his last will and testament dated November 7, 1846, and probated February 22, 1847, devised Lot Number 21 including Wappocomo (referred to in the will as the "Casey tract") to his son Colonel Isaac Parsons (1814–1862). Parsons' brother James "Big Jim" Parsons, Jr. (1798–1858), inherited the Collins tract (Lot Number 20) and his other brother David C. Parsons (1803–1860) inherited Lot Number 13. Parsons and his brothers also inherited the nearby "Jake Sugar Rum tract, the McGuire tract, and five town lots in Romney". Parsons eventually acquired Wappocomo plantation outright, and in 1861 he undertook a two-story stone expansion to the main house at Wappocomo.
In accordance with his express wishes, Newman was buried in the grave of his lifelong friend Ambrose St. John. The pall over the coffin bore the motto that Newman adopted for use as a cardinal, Cor ad cor loquitur ("Heart speaks to heart"), which William Barry, writing in the Catholic Encyclopedia (1913), traces to Francis de Sales and sees as revealing the secret of Newman's "eloquence, unaffected, graceful, tender, and penetrating". Ambrose St. John had become a Roman Catholic at around the same time as Newman, and the two men have a joint memorial stone inscribed with the motto Newman had chosen, Ex umbris et imaginibus in veritatem ("Out of shadows and phantasms into the truth"), which Barry traces to Plato's allegory of the cave. On 27 February 1891, Newman's estate was probated at £4,206.
Probate is the judicial process whereby a will is "proved" in a court of law and accepted as a valid public document that is the true last testament of the deceased, or whereby the estate is settled according to the laws of intestacy in the state of residence of the deceased at time of death in the absence of a legal will. The granting of probate is the first step in the legal process of administering the estate of a deceased person, resolving all claims and distributing the deceased person's property under a will. A probate court decides the legal validity of a testator's (deceased person's) will and grants its approval, also known as granting probate, to the executor. The probated will then becomes a legal instrument that may be enforced by the executor in the law courts if necessary.
Redish co-authors this paper with Livio Di Matteo, an economist and professor of economics at Lakehead University. Redish and Di Matteo analyze the micro-data of Ontario descendants in terms of an individual's asset holdings in the 19th century to illustrate the substantial growth of the early Canadian banking system and evolving nature of monetary liabilities. Upon gathering data from inventories of 7,516 probated estate files of Ontario decedents in the years 1802 and 1902, Redish examines the impact of these determinants of an individual's asset monetary holdings as well as the role of demographic, geographic and economic factors in the growth of the banking system. From 1871 to 1913 the banking sector grew relative to the size of the Canadian economy, specifically Ontario, Canada's largest province, in the 1890s accounted for the greatest economic output.
Roach, Marilynne K. (2002), The Salem Witch Trials, A Day- By-Day Chronicle of a Community Under Siege, pg. 587, Cooper Square Press, New York, NY, [3] In June 1696 Elizabeth filed an appeal to contest her husband's will. She testified in court that in that "sad time of darkness before my said husband was executed it is evident somebody had contrived a will and brought it to him to sign, wherein his whole estate is disposed of". The will had already been probated and assets distributed and she stated that her step- children "will not suffer me to have one penny of the estate, neither upon the account of my husband's contract with me before marriage nor yet upon the account of the dower which, as I humbly conceive, doth belong or ought to belong to me by law, for they say that I am dead in the law".
The distinction between "movables" (not associated in any way with real estate as such nor necessary to its enjoyment) and "immovables" (such as buildings and often including spare parts or even potentially but not usually mobile tools or devices or systems) arises from the principle of lex situs, by which the governing law for immovables is that where the land is located, regardless of where a will is probated or contract made or executed. There are distinctions made between monetary claim on land and land itself, often with different limitations. However, these distinctions determine jurisdiction, rather than define how to resolve the conversion or possession issue. The fact that personal property is annexed to realty after its conversion usually does not prevent the maintenance of an action for the conversion, although opinion on this subject remains mixed (in part due to conflits of laws between movables and immovables on the same lot).
She married Granville Elliott on 15 March 1735, in Mannheim, but the couple lived in Lorraine after their marriage, where they had one daughter and six sons: #Marie Charlotte Elliott (23 May 1736 - 3 February 1785) #Stanislaus François Xavier Elliott (7 June 1737 - after 1752) #Amable Gaspard Antoine Elliott (4 September 1738 - 30 June 1814) #Charles Phillippe Elliott (1 December 1740 - unknown) #Paul Antoine Elliott (12 June 1741 - 25 July 1741) #François Maximillian Elliott (12 June 1741 - unknown) #Jean-Baptiste-François Elliott (25 June 1747 - unknown) Jeanne Thérèse died in Nancy on 7 July 1748 and was buried two days later in the nave of the Notre-Dame church in Nancy. Her body was reburied when the church was demolished in 1790. Because Granville returned to Britain and remarried, he published a will for Jeanne Therese at London.Will: PROB 6/134 Fol 18 as Jane Teresia Duhan de Martigny, probated 6 Feb 1758 12/128 p.

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