Contact Us
Click here to go to the contact form if you have a question about an inheritance dispute.
YOUR PRIVACY.
YOUR PRIVACY IS IMPORTANT TO US.
We take your privacy very seriously. We are keenly aware of the trust you place in us and our responsibility to protect your privacy. We treat all information provided to us with care and discretion.
Use the Search Box
Looking for specific topics and not seeing them? Use the search box at the very top to find what you are looking for.
Examples might be "community property" or "Divorce" or "Intestate."
Robert A. Ray
If you feel that you have lost an inheritance or are going to lose an inheritance; need to remove a Trustee due to a mismanaged estate or due to unscrupulous relatives; or, if you are considering contesting a will, we would be happy to give you a free, confidential review of the merits of your case.
Please click on the "Contact Us" tab at the top of the page, where you can fill out a short questionnaire or call us at the phone numbers listed. Board Certified, Personal Injury Trial Law — Texas Board of Legal Specialization.
Our principal office is in Tyler, Texas.
We handle contested probate cases throughout Texas.
Tell Us How to Improve
Who's Online
We have 9 guests online| Find Out the Kind of Property that is Inherited if You Die Intestate (Without a Will)? |
|
Probate property is further designated as community property or separate property. You can find a discussion of these terms on this site under the Glossary by clicking on the words. You only have community property if you are married at the time of your death. If you are not married, are divorced or are a widow or widower when you die, all of your property is separate property. Married – separate or community property Separate Property –
Community Property -
Not Married - only separate property With children -
No children -
Note: When the intestate's children, descendants, brothers, sisters, uncles, aunts, or any other relatives of the deceased standing in the first or same degree alone come into the distribution upon intestacy, they shall take per capita, namely: by persons; and, when a part of them being dead and a part living, the descendants of those dead shall have right to distribution upon intestacy, such descendants shall inherit only such portion of said property as the parent through whom they inherit would be entitled to if alive (i.e. per stirpes or by the root and not per capita.) Probate Code §43. Example: An intestate dies who was never married and who had no children. His parents predecease him. He had three siblings. Sibling A has one child and survives the intestate. Sibling B has two children but predeceases the intestate. Sibling C has three children and also predeceases the intestate. The estate is divided per stirpes and not per capita. The intestate's property is divided into three parts. The surviving sibling A gets one third; the two children of sibling B share one third and the three children of sibling C share one third. Example: An intestate dies who was never married and who had no children. His parents predecease him. He had three siblings. Sibling A has one child. Sibling B has two children. Sibling C has three children. All of the siblings predecease the intestate. The estate is divided per capita and not per stirpes. The estate is divided into six shares and each of the surviving nieces and nephews receive one sixth. |


What property is inherited by your heirs in Texas if you die