An estate planning and probate attorney should not forget about used burial spaces. Consider, for example, a plot owner who purchases a plot containing two burial spaces. Even after he buries his deceased wife in one of the spaces, he will still be the owner of the exclusive right of sepulture to both burial spaces. The exclusive right of sepulture to a burial space does not disappear once the remains of a person have been interred in the space. In fact, there are several important rights that are peculiar to a used space:
Thus, whether an attorney is drafting a Last Will and Testament or a Transfer of Right of Sepulture, the attorney should include all burial property owned by the plot owner (or former plot owner, as the case may be)—both used and unused—in the instrument. This is just one more service that a savvy estate planning and probate attorney can offer his clients.
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D. Scott CurryAttorney at Law Archives
December 2015
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