§ 3-4.1 Revocation of wills; effect on codicils (a) Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, a revocation or alteration, if intended by the testator, may be effected in the following manner only: (1) A will or any part thereof may be revoked or altered by: (A) Another will. (B) A writing of the testator […]
§ 3-4.2 Agreement to convey property previously disposed of by will not a revocation An agreement made by a testator to convey any property does not revoke a prior testamentary disposition of such property; but such property passes under the will to the beneficiaries, subject to whatever rights were created by such agreement.
§ 3-4.3 Revocatory effect of a conveyance, settlement or other act affecting property previously disposed of by will A conveyance, settlement or other act of a testator by which an estate in his property, previously disposed of by will, is altered but not wholly divested does not revoke such disposition, but the estate in the […]
§ 3-4.4 Conveyance of property of an incompetent or conservatee, previously disposed of specifically by will, not revocation or ademption In the case of a sale or other transfer by a committee or conservator, during the lifetime of its incompetent or conservatee, of any property which such incompetent or conservatee had previously disposed of specifically […]
§ 3-4.5 Insurance proceeds from specific disposition not subject to ademption Where insurance proceeds from property which was the subject of a specific disposition are paid after the testator’s death, such proceeds, to the extent received by the personal representative, are payable by him to the beneficiary of such disposition; and such proceeds retain the […]
§ 3-4.6 Revocation or alteration of later will not to revive prior will or any provisions thereof (a) If after executing a will the testator executes a later will which revokes or alters the prior one, a revocation of the later will does not, of itself, revive the prior will or any provision thereof. (b) […]