The California Probate Code governs the Independent Administration of Estates Act also referred to as IAEA.
It is a series of laws that allow an executor or administrator to manage or administer most aspects of the decedent’s estate without court supervision.
An estate administrator could be a surviving spouse, someone named in the Will, a relative of the deceased, a friend, or an interested person.
Jennifer F. Scharre, probate and trust attorney discusses the advantages of administering a California probate estate with the power to sell real property without the court’s permission. This authority is under the Independent Administration of Estates Act or IAEA.
The powers of a personal representative get granted when the judge grants Letters. Administration of the estate begins after the Letters get issued by the court. Letters Testamentary or Letters of Administration grant the level of authority and if a bond is required.
If the Will prohibits IAEA, then neither authority gets granted by the court.
The notice gets mailed or delivered to all parties entitled to receive it. It must get mailed no less than 15 days before the proposed action takes place. The notice gets prepared and managed by the probate attorneys for the estate. When mailed, the notice gets sent to the person’s last known address via first-class mail.
Is the personal representative required to administer the estate under IAEA when the full authority to do so gets granted by the court?
Probate and trust administration laws vary from state to state. The information provided here refers to the IAEA in the State of California.
Always consult with a probate attorney to understand the legal proceedings to probate the estate of a deceased person.
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