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"Are the death benefits from the insurance policies to be included in the division of the estate?"
The will provided a division of the estate among all relatives who established their claim within a certain time limit.
The unequal division of the estate among children can result in considerable inequality.
Each son stood to inherit 2,000 guilders, before the division of the estate.
If his claim of relationship wouldn't stand the test, he simply wouldn't participate in the division of the estate when it was settled later.
Palais Ostein, a horseshoe-shaped complex from the 18th century, about 1815 the grand middle building was abandoned owing to a division of the estate.
The division of the estates was effected early in 1207, by which the rights to the earldom were assigned to Amicia and Simon.
The conflict was finally settled on the eve of the 1648 Peace of Westphalia, more than eighty years after the division of the estates.
Imagine that all the creditors are put in a room and told to agree among themselves on a division of the estate; if they can't agree, nobody gets anything.
On the division of the estates, Agecroft, and lands in Pendlebury, became the portion of Anne, who married William Dauntesey, from Wiltshire.
The second variant has a farmer's wife from Timmenrode appearing: "In a gray time the Devil came to an agreement with the Lord over a division of the estate.
It avoided the generational division of the estate to the extent that occurred under gavelkind, and at the same time give younger branches a stake in the stability of the house.
Upon the division of the estates of William Fitz Duncan, and his wife Alice de Romney, among their three daughters, the manor passed to Alice the youngest.
In 1795, following the division of the estate with the death of Madame de Melmont, the property was described as a "dwelling house castle and accessories and a farm of 145 acres".
The emperor came to Lenzburg Castle and personally supervised the division of the estate, giving a majority of the lands to his son, the Count palatine Otto of Burgundy.
The norm in Quaker families of this era was equal division of the estate among children of both sexes, rather than division of property exclusively between the sons (or only to eldest sons).
After the division of the estate in 1913 the arch became the entrance to the Castle Golf Club but was later abandoned in favour of the more direct Woodside Drive entrance.
In 1763, Johann's father died, leaving a will that specified an early financial distribution to Johann, prior to the formal division of the estate; as Jones suggests, this indicates that he was not yet able to support himself.
Upon the division of the estate in 1978 she inherited the family shares and acquired the remainder, and over the years of running Pichon Comtesse, has come to be viewed as an ambassador of Bordeaux wine.
The names of these two Grand Crus supposedly reflect the division of the estate of the Seigneur de Montrachet between his two sons, one of whom had been a knight in the Crusades, the other was illegitimate.
If, at the time of delatio, the nasciturus has already been conceived, the fiction is applied to keep its interests in abeyance, and the division of the estate is postponed until such time as the nasciturus is born in the legal-technical sense.
Under Comte d'Arche the estate held a high reputation, and its placement in the 1855 classification's second tier is considered due to the divisions of the estate that followed the French Revolution, and the subsequent drop in quality from the level of the 1780s.
The first division of the estate was made in 1728, when Robert Livingston the Elder stipulated that his son Robert Livingston be granted 13,000 acres (53 km2) from Livingston Manor's southwest corner, a tract which Robert christened Clermont Manor.
In 1634, after a number of divisions of the estate, the principalities of Calenberg and Göttingen were merged into the Principality of Brunswick-Lüneburg-Celle and, after the granting of electorate status in 1692, became part of the Electorate of Hanover.
In essence, the virtually plotless film, opening Friday at Lincoln Plaza 1 in Manhattan, shows an eccentric bourgeois family gathering at their country estate near Bordeaux to bury the family matriarch - and, perhaps more importantly, for each of its members to pursue his or her own interests arising from the division of the estate.