Heirs: Lost and Found
As a WWII pay officer in the Canadian military, my paternal grandfather met a British woman on the beach when he was stationed in the south of England. They married soon after the War and retired in England in the mid-1960s. My grandfather died in the early 1990s; when my step-grandmother, Tessa, died in 2008, in her Will she left her house to my father and aunt.
If there were no Will, Tessa's estate could have contributed to the British government's coffers. In that circumstance, a probate research firm could have played a role.
Title Research is one of the firms highlighted in yesterdays blog about "heir hunters". Its services include: searches for missing beneficiaries, heirs, and legal documents (such as marriage, birth and death certificates back to the 1800s); asset research to value, verify and find missing or unknown assets; missing beneficiary indemnity insurance; probate valuations; and will searches to determine that the Will is the deceased's last will.
If Tessa had died intestate, Title Research, and other firms, could have located her heirs around the world. Alternatively, if the estate trustee had questions about the value of the estate assets, or had the trustee not known the whereabouts of the beneficiaries, it could have enlisted a search firm's services as some anecdotes suggest.
Potentially trustees can protect their personal liability by engaging a firm that has a best practices endorsement of Britain's Law Society. It seems that an estate need not just have ties to the UK, but the extent of a firm's expertise in a specific jurisdiction would have to be assessed.
Interestingly, some of the detective work can be done by amateur sleuths: www.findmypast.com and www.ancestry.co.uk allow access to census data from the 1800s and a host of other historical information. If genealogy is in your blood, it's a place to start. And, as one UK law firm suggests, it might be advisable to do some of your own investigating.
Jonathan Morse
