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25 DePaul L. Rev. 363 (1975-1976)
The Interplay of Probate Assets and Nonprobate Assets in the Administration of a Decedent's Estate

handle is hein.journals/deplr25 and id is 381 raw text is: THE INTERPLAY OF PROBATE ASSETS AND
NONPROBATE ASSETS IN THE ADMINISTRATION
OF A DECEDENT'S ESTATE
James J. Carroll*
With increasing frequency, nontestamentary devices are be-
ing employed as substitutes for a will in contemporary estate
plans. The author explores the interplay of probate and non-
probate assets in two important areas: the surviving spouse's
interest, and the apportionment of the federal estate tax. He
suggests various approaches that the legislature and courts
might adopt in formulating a definitive solution to these current
probate problems.
The past century has witnessed significant changes in not only
the character of the property comprising a decedent's estate, but
also the mode by which property is transferred from one genera-
tion to the next. In the agrarian society of the nineteenth century,
the primary emphasis of probate law was on the devolution of real
estate, then the foundation of the American economy and the
principal source of wealth. As society developed to the present
highly industrialized and urbanized corporate structure, real es-
tate was displaced from its exalted position in the economic
structure and was replaced by intangible personal property, the
life blood of modern capitalism. Accordingly, the transmission of
intangible personal property has become the focal point of most
contemporary estate plans.
This shift in emphasis from real property to intangible personal
property has been accompanied by a related phenomenon in the
design of estate plans: a marked decline in the reliance on a will
as the primary vehicle to dispose of one's estate.' With increasing
frequency, a variety of nontestamentary devices have been em-
* Associate, Sidley & Austin. Member of the Illinois Bar.
1. The decline in the use of a will as the primary estate planning tool is due in large
part to the public's attitude toward probate proceedings.
Rightly, or wrongly, the public seems to believe that such mandatory court
proceedings generate unnecessary expense and delay in the transmission of the
average estate at death. As a result, myriad techniques have developed to avoid
probate.
Zartman, Uniform Probate Code-Policies and Prospects, 61 ILL. B.J. 428, 429 (1973).

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