{"id":"wills-act-1997","name":"Wills Act 1997","slug":"wills-act-1997","collection":"act","jurisdiction":"vic","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":null,"makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":176418,"registerId":"vic-wills-act-1997-current","compilationNumber":null,"startDate":"2026-04-05","status":"InForce","reasons":null,"registeredAt":null},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Wills Act 1997","content":"Version No. 036\n\n**Wills Act 1997**\n\n**No. 88 of 1997**\n\nVersion incorporating amendments as at  \n26 April 2021\n\n**table of provisions**\n\n*Section Page*\n\nPart 1—Preliminary 1\n\n1 Purpose 1\n\n2 Commencement 1\n\n3 Definitions 2\n\nPart 2—The making, alteration, revocation and revival of wills 5\n\nDivision 1—Will-making powers 5\n\n4 What property may be disposed of by will? 5\n\n5 Minimum age for making a will 5\n\n6 Wills by minors who are married 6\n\nDivision 2—Executing a will 6\n\n7 How should a will be executed? 6\n\n8 Must witnesses know that they are signing a will? 7\n\n8A Remote execution procedure 7\n\n8B Which document is the will? 9\n\n8C Recording of remote execution procedure 10\n\n8D Remote execution procedure does not limit other duties and obligations 10\n\nDivision 3—Dispensing with requirements for execution 10\n\n9 When may the Court dispense with requirements for execution or revocation? 10\n\nDivision 4—Witnessing a will 12\n\n10 What persons cannot act as witnesses to wills? 12\n\n11 Can an interested witness benefit from a disposition under a will? 12\n\nDivision 5—Alteration, revocation and revival of wills 12\n\n12 When and how can a will be revoked? 12\n\n13 What is the effect of marriage on a will? 13\n\n14 What is the effect of divorce on a will? 14\n\n15 Can a will be altered? 16\n\n16 Can a revoked will be revived? 16\n\nDivision 6—Wills to which foreign laws apply 17\n\n16A Division 6 does not limit the operation of Division 7 17\n\n17 General rule as to validity of a will executed in a foreign place 17\n\n18 Ascertainment of the system of law which applies to a will 18\n\n19 Construction of the law applying to wills 19\n\nDivision 7—International wills 19\n\n19A Definitions 19\n\n19B Application of Convention 20\n\n19C Persons authorised to act in connection with international wills 20\n\n19D Witnesses to international wills 21\n\n19E Application of Act to international wills 21\n\nPart 3—Wills made or rectified under Court authorisation 22\n\nDivision 1—Court authorised wills by minors 22\n\n20 Wills by minors authorised by the Court 22\n\nDivision 2—Court authorised wills for persons who do not have testamentary capacity 23\n\n21 Wills for persons who do not have testamentary capacity authorised by the Court 23\n\n21A Information which the Court may require in support of an application under section 21 23\n\n21B Matters of which the Court must be satisfied before making an order under section 21 25\n\n21C Persons entitled to appear 25\n\n21D Court may order separate representation of person lacking testamentary capacity 26\n\n22 Hearing an application for an order 26\n\n24 Revocation of a will made under an order under section 21 27\n\n25 Execution and storage of wills made under an order under section 21 27\n\n30 Recognition of statutory wills 28\n\nDivision 3—Court authorised rectification of wills 29\n\n31 Can a will be rectified? 29\n\n32 Order to be attached to will 30\n\nPart 4—Construction of wills 31\n\nDivision 1—General rules about the construction of wills 31\n\n33 What interest in property does a will operate to dispose of? 31\n\n34 When does a will take effect? 31\n\n35 What is the effect of a failure of a disposition? 31\n\n36 When is evidence admissible to clarify a will? 32\n\n37 What is the effect of a change in the testator's domicile? 32\n\n38 Income on contingent and future dispositions 32\n\n39 Beneficiaries must survive testator by 30 days 32\n\nDivision 2—Construction of particular provisions in wills 34\n\n40 What does a general disposition of land include? 34\n\n41 What does a general disposition of property include? 34\n\n42 What is the effect of a disposition of real property without words of limitation? 34\n\n43 How are dispositions to issue to operate? 35\n\n44 How are requirements to survive with issue construed? 35\n\n45 Dispositions not to fail because issue have died before the testator 35\n\n46 Construction of residuary dispositions 36\n\n47 Dispositions to unincorporated associations of persons 37\n\n48 Can a person, by will, delegate the power to dispose of property? 39\n\n49 What is the effect of referring to a valuation in a will? 39\n\n49A Effect of remuneration clause 39\n\nPart 5—General 40\n\n50 Who may see a will? 40\n\n50A Regulations 41\n\nPart 6—Transitional and consequential provisions 43\n\n51 Repeal of Wills Act 1958 43\n\n52 Transitional provisions 43\n\n52A Transitional provision—Wills Amendment Act 2007 44\n\n53 Transitional provision—Court authorised wills—Justice Legislation Amendment (Succession and Surrogacy) Act 2014 44\n\n54 Power to resolve transitional difficulties in proceeding—Justice Legislation Amendment (Succession and Surrogacy) Act 2014 44\n\n56 Transitional provision—Administration and Probate and Other Acts Amendment (Succession and Related Matters) Act 2017 45\n\n57 Transitional provisions—Justice Legislation Amendment (System Enhancements and Other Matters) Act 2021 45\n\nSchedule 46\n\nEndnotes 50\n\n1 General information 50\n\n2 Table of Amendments 52\n\n3 Amendments Not in Operation 55\n\n4 Explanatory details 56\n\n**Version No.** **036**\n\n**Wills Act 1997**\n\n**No. 88 of 1997**\n\nVersion incorporating amendments as at  \n26 April 2021\n\n**The Parliament of Victoria enacts as follows:**\n\nPart 1—Preliminary\n\n\t1 Purpose\n\nThe purpose of this Act is to re-state, with amendments, the law relating to wills in Victoria by making provision for—\n\n(a) the making, alteration, revocation and revival of wills, including—\n\n(i) the capacity of minors to make wills; and\n\n(ii) the effects of marriage and divorce of testators on wills made by them; and\n\n(b) the capacity of the Court to authorise the making or rectification of wills in certain circumstances; and\n\n(c) the construction of wills; and\n\n(d) other general matters in relation to wills; and\n\n(e) the repeal of the **Wills Act 1958** and the amendment of the **Administration and Probate Act 1958**.\n\n\t2 Commencement\n\n(1) Section 1 and this section come into operation on the day on which this Act receives the Royal Assent.\n\n(2) Subject to subsection (3), the remaining provisions of this Act come into operation on a day or days to be proclaimed.\n\n(3) If a provision referred to in subsection (2) does not come into operation before 1 January 1999, it comes into operation on that day.\n\n\t3 Definitions\n\n(1) In this Act—\n\n***Court*** means the Supreme Court;\n\nS. 3(1) def. of *de facto spouse* repealed by No. 27/2001 s. 3(Sch. 1 item 14.1(a)).\n\n* * * * *\n\n***disposition*** includes the following—\n\n(a) any gift, devise or bequest of property under a will;\n\n(b) the creation by will of a power of appointment affecting property;\n\n(c) the exercise by will of a power of appointment affecting property;\n\nS. 3(1) def. of *document* amended by No. 11/2021 s. 79(2).\n\n***document*** means any paper or material on which there is writing and if the remote execution procedure is used, includes a document in electronic form;\n\nS. 3(1) def. of *domestic partner* inserted by No. 27/2001 s. 3(Sch. 1 item 14.1(b)), substituted by No. 12/2008 s. 73(1)(Sch. 1 item 66.1).\n\n***domestic partner*** of a deceased person  means—\n\n(a) a person who was at the date of death in a registered relationship with the person; or\n\n(b) a person to whom the person was not married but with whom the deceased person was living at the date of death as a couple on a genuine domestic basis (irrespective of gender);\n\n***minor*** means a person who is less than 18 years old;\n\n***Registrar*** has the same meaning as in the **Administration and Probate Act 1958**;\n\nS. 3(1) def. of *remote execution procedure* inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 79(1).\n\n***remote execution procedure*** means the procedure set out in section 8A;\n\nS. 3(1) def. of *remuneration clause* inserted by No. 41/2017 s. 28.\n\n***remuneration clause***  has the same meaning as it has in the **Administration and Probate Act 1958**;\n\nS. 3(1) def. of *special witness* inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 79(1).\n\n***special witness*** means—\n\n(a) an Australian legal practitioner; or\n\n(b) a justice of the peace appointed under section 7 of the **Honorary Justices Act 2014**; or\n\n(c) a person who is a member of a prescribed class of person;\n\nS. 3(1) def. of *spouse* inserted by No. 27/2001 s. 3(Sch. 1 item 14.1(b)), amended by No. 44/2012 s. 7.\n\n***spouse*** of a deceased person means a person to whom the deceased person was married at the date of death.\n\nS. 3(1A) inserted by No. 27/2001 s. 3(Sch. 1 item 14.2), substituted by No. 12/2008 s. 73(1)(Sch. 1 item 66.2).\n\n(1A) For the  purposes of the definition of ***domestic partner*** in subsection  (1)—\n\n(a) ***registered relationship*** has the same meaning as in the **Relationships Act 2008**; and\n\n(b) in determining whether persons who were not in a registered relationship were domestic partners of each other, all the circumstances of their relationship are to be taken into account, including any one or more of the matters referred to in section 35(2) of the **Relationships Act 2008** as may be relevant in a particular case.\n\n(2) This Act applies to a codicil or other testamentary writing in the same manner as it applies to a will.\n\nPart 2—The making, alteration, revocation and revival of wills\n\nDivision 1—Will-making powers\n\n\t4 What property may be disposed of by will?\n\n(1) A person may, by will, dispose of—\n\n(a) any property to which the person is entitled at the time of his or her death, whether or not the entitlement of the person did or did not exist at the date of the making of the will; and\n\n(b) any property to which the personal representative of that person becomes entitled, by virtue of the office of personal representative to that person, after the death of that person—\n\nother than property of which the testator is trustee.\n\n(2) In this section ***property*** includes—\n\n(a) a contingent, executory or future interest in property—\n\n(i) whether the person becomes entitled to the interest by way of the instrument which created the interest or otherwise; and\n\n(ii) whether that person has or has not been ascertained as the person in whom the interest may become vested; and\n\n(b) a right of entry or recovery of property or a right to call for the transfer of title of property.\n\n\t5 Minimum age for making a will\n\nA will made by a minor is not valid.\n\n\t6 Wills by minors who are married\n\nDespite section 5—\n\n(a) a minor may make a will in contemplation of marriage, and may alter or revoke such a will, but the will is of no effect if the marriage contemplated does not take place;\n\n(b) a minor who is married may make, alter or revoke a will;\n\n(c) a minor who has been married may revoke the whole or any part of a will made while the person was married or in contemplation of that marriage.\n\nDivision 2—Executing a will\n\n\t7 How should a will be executed?\n\n(1) A will is not valid unless—\n\n(a) it is in writing, and signed by the testator or by some other person, in the presence of, and at the direction of the testator; and\n\n(b) the signature is made with the testator's intention of executing a will, whether or not the signature appears at the foot of the will; and\n\n(c) the signature is made or acknowledged by the testator in the presence of two or more witnesses present at the same time; and\n\n(d) at least two of the witnesses attest and sign the will in the presence of the testator but not necessarily in the presence of each other.\n\nS. 7(2) amended by No. 11/2021 s. 80(1).\n\n(2) Subject to the requirements of the remote execution procedure, a statement in a will that the will has been executed in accordance with this section is not necessary for the will to be valid.\n\n(3) Where a testator purports to make an appointment by his or her will in the exercise of a power of appointment by will, the appointment is not valid unless the will is executed in accordance with this section.\n\n(4) Where a power is conferred on a person to make an appointment by a will that is to be executed in some particular manner or with some particular solemnity, the person may exercise the power by a will that is executed in accordance with this section, but is not executed in that manner or with that solemnity.\n\nS. 7(5) inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 80(2).\n\n(5) For the purposes of this section, a will may be executed by using the remote execution procedure and that will is a valid will.\n\nS. 7(6) inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 80(2).\n\n(6) For the purposes of this section, a signature may be an electronic signature if the remote execution procedure is used.\n\nS. 7(7) inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 80(2).\n\n(7) For the purposes of this section \"in the presence of\" includes being present by audio visual link in accordance with the remote execution procedure.\n\n\t8 Must witnesses know that they are signing a will?\n\nA will which is executed in accordance with this Act is validly executed even if a witness to the will did not know that it was a will.\n\nS. 8A inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 81.\n\n\t8A Remote execution procedure\n\n(1) A will may be executed under this Act in accordance with the remote execution procedure set out in this section.\n\n**Note**\n\nSee section 3(2) regarding codicils and other testamentary writing.\n\n(2) One of the witnesses must be a special witness and, if more than one witness qualifies as a special witness, only one of the special witnesses is to be the special witness.\n\n(3) All elements of the remote execution procedure must be carried out on the same day and within Victoria.\n\n(4) The testator must either—\n\n(a) sign the will with all witnesses clearly seeing that signature being made by audio visual link or a combination of physical presence and audio visual link; or\n\n(b) direct another person (the ***substitute signatory***) to sign the will with all witnesses clearly seeing and hearing the direction of the testator to the substitute signatory and all witnesses and the testator seeing the substitute signatory's signature being made on behalf of the testator by audio visual link or a combination of physical presence and audio visual link.\n\n(5) Subject to subsection (6), any witness who is physically present with the testator then signs the will in accordance with the requirements for witnesses under this Act.\n\n(6) The special witness must sign the will as the special witness last, whether the special witness is physically present with the testator or not.\n\n(7) The will is then transmitted by electronic communication to any witness attending by audio visual link who must—\n\n(a) be reasonably satisfied that the document which the witness is to sign is the same document that the testator (or the substitute signatory on behalf of the testator) signed; and\n\n(b) ensure that there is on the will a statement that the witness witnessed the will by audio visual link in accordance with the remote execution procedure; and\n\n(c) sign the will as a witness with the testator clearly seeing the signature of the witness being made by audio visual link; and\n\n(d) if the witness is the special witness, in addition to complying with paragraphs (a) to (c), the special witness must check the will for compliance with the remote execution procedure and ensure that there is a statement on the will setting out—\n\n(i) that the will was signed and witnessed in accordance with the remote execution procedure; and\n\n(ii) that the person is a special witness and what type of special witness the person is; and\n\n(iii) whether an audio visual recording was made of the signing or witnessing of the will by the remote execution procedure.\n\nS. 8B inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 81.\n\n\t8B Which document is the will?\n\n(1) If a will is executed in accordance with the remote execution procedure, the document which has been checked and signed by the special witness in accordance with section 8A(7) is the valid will.\n\n(2) The place of execution of a will executed in accordance with the remote execution procedure is the place where the testator is located at the time the will is executed.\n\n(3) A document purporting to be a will other than the will referred to in subsection (1) cannot be used unless Division 3 of Part 2 or Part 3 applies to it.\n\n(4) Subject to subsection (3), counterpart documents do not constitute a valid will.\n\nS. 8C inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 81.\n\n\t8C Recording of remote execution procedure\n\n(1) An audio visual recording of the execution of a will by remote execution procedure may be made only if all of the parties to the procedure consent to a recording being made.\n\n(2) The making of a recording or the failure to make a recording referred to in subsection (1) does not affect the validity of the will executed by the remote execution procedure or the use of that procedure.\n\nS. 8D inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 81.\n\n\t8D Remote execution procedure does not limit other duties and obligations\n\n(1) The use of the remote execution procedure applies in addition to any other duty or obligation under any Act (including any Commonwealth Act) or at common law applying to a person as a testator or witness to a will or other testamentary document.\n\n(2) The use of the remote execution procedure does not limit any requirement imposed by this Act by which a person must not write or do something without first being satisfied of certain matters.\n\nDivision 3—Dispensing with requirements for execution\n\n\t9 When may the Court dispense with requirements for execution or revocation?\n\n(1) The Supreme Court may admit to probate as the will of a deceased person—\n\n(a) a document which has not been executed in the manner in which a will is required to be executed by this Act; or\n\n(b) a document, an alteration to which has not been executed in the manner in which an alteration to a will is required to be executed by this Act—\n\nif the Court is satisfied that that person intended the document to be his or her will.\n\n(2) The Supreme Court may refuse to admit a will to probate which the testator has purported to revoke by some writing, where the writing has not been executed in the manner in which a will is required to be executed by this Act, if the Court is satisfied that the testator intended to revoke the will by that writing.\n\n(3) In making a decision under subsection (1) or (2) the Court may have regard to—\n\n(a) any evidence relating to the manner in which the document was executed; and\n\n(b) any evidence of the testamentary intentions of the testator, including evidence of statements made by the testator.\n\n(4) This section applies to a document whether it came into existence within or outside the State.\n\n(5) The Registrar may exercise the powers of the Court under this section—\n\n(a) where the Court has authorised the Registrar to exercise the Court's powers under this section; and\n\n(b) where—\n\n(i) all persons who would be affected by a decision under this section so consent; or\n\n(ii) if consent is not given, the value of the estate does not exceed the limit set for the purposes of this section by the Court.\n\n(6) In this section ***document*** has the same meaning as in the **Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984**.\n\nDivision 4—Witnessing a will\n\nS. 10 amended by No. 11/2021 s. 82 (ILA s. 39B(1)).\n\n\t10 What persons cannot act as witnesses to wills?\n\n(1) A person who is unable to see and attest that a testator has signed a document, may not act as a witness to a will.\n\nS. 10(2) inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 82.\n\n(2) For the purposes of this section, \"signed\" includes signed by electronic signature if the remote execution procedure is used.\n\nS. 11 amended by No. 27/2001 s. 3(Sch. 1 item 14.3).\n\n\t11 Can an interested witness benefit from a disposition under a will?\n\nA person who witnesses a will or his or her spouse or domestic partner, at the time the will is witnessed, is not disqualified from taking a benefit under the will.\n\nDivision 5—Alteration, revocation and revival of wills\n\n\t12 When and how can a will be revoked?\n\nS. 12(1) repealed by No. 43/1998  \ns. 52(1).\n\n* * * * *\n\n(2) Subject to—\n\nS. 12(2)(a) repealed by No. 43/1998  \ns. 52(2)(a).\n\n* * * * *\n\n(b) sections 13 and 14; and\n\n(c) any order made by the Court under this Act authorising the revocation of a will; and\n\n(d) any order made by the Court under this Act dispensing with the formal requirements for revoking a will—\n\nthe whole or any part of a will may not be revoked except—\n\nS. 12(2)(da) inserted by No. 43/1998  \ns. 52(2)(b).\n\n(da) by a later will; or\n\n(e) by some writing, declaring an intention to revoke it, executed in the manner in which a will is required to be executed by this Act; or\n\n(f) by the testator, or some person in his or her presence and by his or her direction, burning, tearing or otherwise destroying the will with the intention of revoking it; or\n\n(g) by the testator, or by some person in his or her presence and at his or her direction, writing on the will or dealing with the will in such a manner that the Court is satisfied, from the state of the will, that the testator intended to revoke it.\n\nS. 12(3) inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 83.\n\n(3) For the purposes of subsection (2)(e), a will may be revoked by using the remote execution procedure and that revocation is a valid revocation.\n\n\t13 What is the effect of marriage on a will?\n\n(1) A will is revoked by the marriage of the testator.\n\n(2) Despite subsection (1)—\n\n(a) a disposition to the person to whom the testator is married at the time of his or her death; or\n\n(b) an appointment as executor, trustee, advisory trustee or guardian of the person to whom the testator is married at the time of his or her death; or\n\n(c) a power to exercise, by will, a power of appointment, when, if the testator did not exercise the power, the property so appointed would not pass to the executor or administrator or the State Trustees under section 19 of the **Administration and Probate Act 1958**—\n\nis not revoked by the marriage of the testator.\n\n(3) Despite subsection (1)—\n\n(a) a will made in contemplation of a marriage (whether or not that contemplation is expressed in the will) is not revoked by the solemnisation of the marriage contemplated; and\n\n(b) a will which is expressed to be made in contemplation of marriage generally is not revoked by the marriage of the testator.\n\n\t14 What is the effect of divorce on a will?\n\n(1) The divorce of a testator revokes—\n\n(a) any disposition to the divorced spouse of the testator, made in a will in existence at the time of the divorce; and\n\n(b) the grant of a power of appointment by the will exercisable by or in favour of the spouse, other than a power of appointment exercisable by the spouse only in favour of persons who are the children of both the testator and the spouse; and\n\n(c) any appointment made by the will of the spouse as an executor, trustee, advisory trustee or guardian other than the appointment of the spouse as a trustee of property left by the will upon trust for beneficiaries that include the children of the spouse.\n\n(2) This section does not apply to any disposition, appointment or grant, if it appears that the testator did not want the disposition, appointment or grant to be revoked upon the ending of the marriage.\n\n(3) A will in which there is a disposition, appointment or grant to which subsection (1) applies takes effect as if the spouse had predeceased the testator.\n\n(4) In this section—\n\n***divorce*** means the ending of a marriage by—\n\n(a) a decree of dissolution of the marriage becoming absolute under the Family Law Act 1975 of the Commonwealth; or\n\n(b) the granting of a decree of nullity in respect of the marriage by the Family Court of Australia; or\n\n(c) the dissolution or annulment of the marriage in accordance with the law of a place outside Australia, if that dissolution or annulment is recognised in Australia under the Family Law Act 1975 of the Commonwealth;\n\n***divorced spouse*** means the spouse of the testator by the marriage which was the subject of the divorce;\n\n***spouse*** includes a party to a purported or void marriage.\n\n\t15 Can a will be altered?\n\n(1) An alteration to a will after it has been executed is not effective unless the alteration is executed in the manner in which the will is required to be executed under this Act.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to an alteration to a will if the words or effect of the will are no longer apparent because of the alteration.\n\n(3) If a will is altered, it is sufficient compliance with the requirements for execution, if the signature of the testator and of the witnesses to the alteration are made—\n\n(a) in the margin, or on some other part of the will beside, near or otherwise relating to the alteration; or\n\n(b) as authentication of a memorandum referring to the alteration and written on the will.\n\nS. 15(4) inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 84.\n\n(4) For the purposes of this section, a will may be altered by using the remote execution procedure and that alteration is a valid alteration.\n\nS. 15(5) inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 84.\n\n(5) For the purposes of this section, a signature may be an electronic signature if the remote execution procedure is used.\n\n\t16 Can a revoked will be revived?\n\n(1) A will or part of a will which has been revoked is revived by re-execution or by execution of a codicil which shows an intention to revive the will or part.\n\n(2) A revival of a will which was partly revoked and later revoked as to the balance only revives that part of the will most recently revoked.\n\n(3) Subsection (2) does not apply if a contrary intention appears in the document which revives the will.\n\n(4) A will which has been revoked and later revived, either wholly or partly, is to be taken to have been executed on the date on which the will is revived.\n\nS. 16(5) inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 85.\n\n(5) For the purposes of this section, a will or codicil may be executed or re-executed by using the remote execution procedure and that revived will or that codicil is a valid document.\n\nDivision 6—Wills to which foreign laws apply\n\nS. 16A inserted by No. 44/2012 s. 4.\n\n\t16A Division 6 does not limit the operation of Division 7\n\nThis Division does not limit the operation of Division 7.\n\n\t17 General rule as to validity of a will executed in a foreign place\n\n(1) A will is to be taken to be properly executed if its execution conforms to the internal law in force in the place—\n\n(a) where it was executed; or\n\n(b) which was the testator's domicile or habitual residence, either at the time the will was executed, or at the testator's death; or\n\n(c) of which the testator was a national, either at the date of execution of the will, or at the testator's death.\n\n(2) The following wills are also to be taken to be properly executed—\n\n(a) a will executed on board a vessel or aircraft, if the will has been executed in conformity with the internal law in force in the place with which the vessel or aircraft may be taken to have been most closely connected having regard to its registration and other relevant circumstances; or\n\n(b) a will, so far as it disposes of immovable property if it has been executed in conformity with the internal law in force in the place where the property is situated; or\n\n(c) a will, so far as it revokes a will or a provision of a will which has been executed in accordance with this Act, or which is taken to have been properly executed by this Act, if the later will has been executed in conformity with any law by which the earlier will or provision would be taken to have been validly executed; or\n\n(d) a will, so far as it exercises a power of appointment, if the will has been executed in conformity with the law governing the validity of the power.\n\n(3) A will to which this section applies, so far as it exercises a power of appointment, is not to be taken to have been improperly executed because it has not been executed in accordance with the formalities required by the instrument creating the power.\n\n\t18 Ascertainment of the system of law which applies to a will\n\nIf, in the case of a will to which the internal law in force in a place is to be applied, there is more than one system of internal law in force in the place which relates to the formal validity of wills the system to be applied is determined as follows—\n\n(a) if there is a rule in force throughout the place which indicates which system applies to the will, that rule must be followed; or\n\n(b) if there is no rule, the system must be that with which the testator was most closely connected—\n\n(i) at the time of his or her death, if the matter is to be determined by reference to circumstances prevailing at his or her death; or\n\n(ii) in any other case, at the time of execution of the will.\n\n\t19 Construction of the law applying to wills\n\n(1) In determining whether a will has been executed in conformity with a particular law, regard must be had to the formal requirements of that law at the time of execution, but account may be taken of a later alteration of the law affecting wills executed at that time, if the alteration enables the will to be treated as properly executed.\n\n(2) If a law in force outside Victoria is applied to a will, a requirement of that law that special formalities must be observed by testators of a particular description or that the witnesses to the execution of a will must have certain qualifications, is to be taken to be a formal requirement only, despite any rule of that law to the contrary.\n\nPt 2 Div. 7 (Heading and ss 19A–19E) inserted by No. 44/2012 s. 5.\n\nDivision 7—International wills\n\nS. 19A inserted by No. 44/2012 s. 5.\n\n\t19A Definitions\n\nIn this Division—\n\n***Convention*** means the Convention providing a Uniform Law on the Form of an International Will 1973 signed in Washington on 26 October 1973;\n\n***international will*** means a will made in accordance with the requirements of the Annex to the Convention as set out in the Schedule.\n\nS. 19B inserted by No. 44/2012 s. 5.\n\n\t19B Application of Convention\n\nThe Annex to the Convention has the force of law in this jurisdiction.\n\n**Note**\n\nThe Annex to the Convention is set out in the Schedule.\n\nS. 19C inserted by No. 44/2012 s. 5.\n\n\t19C Persons authorised to act in connection with international wills\n\n(1) For the purposes of this Part, the following persons are authorised to act in connection with an international will—\n\nS. 19C(1)(a) amended by No. 17/2014 s. 160(Sch. 2 item 111).\n\n(a) an Australian legal practitioner;\n\n(b) a public notary of any Australian jurisdiction.\n\n(2) For the purposes of this Part, a reference in the Annex to the Convention to a person authorised to act in connection with international wills is a reference to—\n\n(a) a person referred to in subsection (1) who is acting in Australia;\n\n(b) any other person who is acting as an authorised person under the law of a State (other than Australia) that is a party to the Convention.\n\n**Note**\n\nThis section gives effect to Articles 2 and 3 of the Convention.\n\nS. 19D inserted by No. 44/2012 s. 5.\n\n\t19D Witnesses to international wills\n\nThe conditions requisite to acting as a witness to an international will are governed by the law of this jurisdiction.\n\n**Note**\n\nFor the relevant provisions of this Act, see Division 4.\n\nS. 19E inserted by No. 44/2012 s. 5, amended by No. 11/2021 s. 86 (ILA s. 39B(1)).\n\n\t19E Application of Act to international wills\n\n(1) To avoid doubt, the provisions of this Act that apply to wills extend to international wills.\n\nS. 19E(2) inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 86.\n\n(2) Despite subsection (1), the remote execution procedure (including electronic signatures) cannot be used for international wills.\n\nPart 3—Wills made or rectified under Court authorisation\n\nDivision 1—Court authorised wills by minors\n\n\t20 Wills by minors authorised by the Court\n\n(1) Despite section 5, the Court may make an order under this section authorising a minor to make a will in specific terms or revoke a will.\n\n(2) An order under this section may be made on the application of the minor or a person on behalf of the minor.\n\n(3) In making an order under this section, the Court must approve the terms of the will.\n\n(4) The Court may impose any conditions on the authorisation that the Court thinks fit.\n\n(5) Before making an order under this section, the Court must be satisfied that—\n\n(a) the minor understands the nature and effect of the proposed will or revocation and the extent of the property disposed of by it; and\n\n(b) the proposed will or revocation accurately reflects the intentions of the minor; and\n\n(c) it is reasonable in all the circumstances that the order should be made.\n\n(6) In addition to the requirements for the execution of a will specified in Part 2, one of the witnesses to the making of a will under this section must be the Registrar.\n\n(7) A will made under this section must be deposited with the Registrar under Part 1, Division 1A of the **Administration and Probate Act 1958**.\n\n(8) Despite section 5C of the **Administration and Probate Act 1958**, any will which has been deposited with the Registrar under subsection (7), must not be withdrawn from deposit unless—\n\n(a) the Court has made an order under this section authorising the revocation of the will; or\n\n(b) the testator has attained 18 years of age or marries.\n\n(9) A failure to comply with subsection (7) does not affect the validity of the will.\n\nDivision 2—Court authorised wills for persons who do not have testamentary capacity\n\n\t21 Wills for persons who do not have testamentary capacity authorised by the Court\n\n(1) The Court may make an order authorising a will to be made in specific terms approved by the Court or revoked on behalf of a person who does not have testamentary capacity.\n\nS. 21(2) amended by No. 80/2014 s. 27.\n\n(2) Any person may make an application for an order under this section.\n\n(3) The Court may make an order under this section on behalf of a person who is a minor and who does not have testamentary capacity, but must not make an order under this section on behalf of a person who is deceased at the time the order is made.\n\nS. 21A inserted by No. 80/2014 s. 28.\n\n\t21A Information which the Court may require in support of an application under section 21\n\nIn proceedings for the hearing of an application for an order under section 21, the applicant, if required by the Court, must give the following—\n\n(a) a written statement of the general nature of the application and the reasons for making it;\n\n(b) a reasonable estimate, formed from any evidence available to the applicant, of the size and character of the estate of the person on whose behalf the will is to be made;\n\n(c) a draft of the proposed will for which the applicant is seeking the Court's approval;\n\n(d) any evidence available to the applicant of the wishes of the person;\n\n(e) any evidence available to the applicant of the ability of the person to participate in the proceedings and express the person's wishes;\n\n(f) any evidence available to the applicant of the likelihood of the person acquiring or regaining testamentary capacity;\n\n(g) any evidence available to the applicant of the terms of any will previously made by the person;\n\n(h) any evidence available to the applicant of the likelihood of an application for a family provision order being made under Part IV of the **Administration and Probate Act 1958** in respect of the property of the person;\n\n(i) any evidence available to the applicant of the circumstances of any person for whom provision might reasonably be expected to be made under the will;\n\n(j) any evidence available to the applicant of any persons who might be entitled to claim on intestacy;\n\n(k) any evidence available to the applicant of any gift for a charitable or other purpose that the person might reasonably be expected to give or make by will;\n\n(l) any other evidence available to the applicant and which is relevant to the application.\n\nS. 21B inserted by No. 80/2014 s. 28.\n\n\t21B Matters of which the Court must be satisfied before making an order under section 21\n\nBefore making an order under section 21, the Court must be satisfied that—\n\n(a) the person on whose behalf the will is to be made or revoked does not have testamentary capacity; and\n\n(b) the proposed will or revocation reflects what the intentions of the person would be likely to be, or what the intentions of the person might reasonably be expected to be, if the person had testamentary capacity; and\n\n(c) it is reasonable in all the circumstances for the Court, by order, to authorise the making of the will for the person.\n\nS. 21C inserted by No. 80/2014 s. 28.\n\n\t21C Persons entitled to appear\n\nEach of the following persons is entitled to appear and be heard in any proceedings for the hearing of an application for an order under section 21—\n\n(a) the person on whose behalf the will is to be made;\n\n(b) an Australian legal practitioner representing that person;\n\n(c) an attorney appointed by that person under an enduring power of attorney;\n\nS. 21C(d) substituted by No. 13/2019 s. 221(Sch. 1 item 61).\n\n(d) any guardian or administrator for the person appointed under the **Guardianship and Administration Act 2019**;\n\n(e) any other person who has, in the opinion of the Court, a genuine interest in the matter.\n\nS. 21D inserted by No. 80/2014 s. 28.\n\n\t21D Court may order separate representation of person lacking testamentary capacity\n\n(1) The Court, if it considers it appropriate to do so, may—\n\n(a) order that a person on whose behalf a will is proposed to be made or revoked under section 21 be separately represented;\n\n(b) make any order it considers necessary to secure that representation.\n\n(2) An order under subsection (1) may be made—\n\n(a) on the Court's own motion; or\n\n(b) on the application of any person entitled to be heard in a proceeding under this Division.\n\nS. 22 amended by No. 69/2009 s. 54(Sch. Pt 1 item 66.1) (ILA s. 39B(1)).\n\n\t22 Hearing an application for an order\n\n(1) In considering an application for an order under section 21—\n\nS. 22(1)(a) amended by No. 80/2014 s. 29(1).\n\n(a) the Court may have regard to any information given to the Court under section 21A; and\n\n(b) the Court may inform itself of any other matter in any manner it sees fit; and\n\n(c) the Court is not bound by the rules of evidence.\n\nS. 22(2) inserted by No. 69/2009 s. 54(Sch. Pt 1 item 66.1).\n\n(2) Nothing in subsection (1) prevents the application of Part 3.10 of the **Evidence Act 2008** to an application under section 21.\n\nS. 22(3) inserted by No. 80/2014 s. 29(2).\n\n(3) In making an order under section 21, the Court may make any necessary related orders or directions.\n\nS. 23  \nrepealed by No. 80/2014 s. 30.\n\n* * * * *\n\n\t24 Revocation of a will made under an order under section 21\n\nIf a will has been made under an order under section 21 on behalf of a person who acquires or regains testamentary capacity after the making of the order, that person may revoke or deal with the will without an order under section 21.\n\n\t25 Execution and storage of wills made under an order under section 21\n\n(1) A will which is made under an order under section 21 is not valid unless it is in writing, signed by the Registrar and sealed with the seal of the Court.\n\n(2) The revocation of a will which is made under an order under section 21 is not valid unless it is effected by a document which is signed by the Registrar and sealed with the seal of the Court.\n\n(3) Any will and any document to which this section applies must be deposited with the Registrar under Part 1, Division 1A of the **Administration and Probate Act 1958**.\n\n(4) Despite section 5C of the **Administration and Probate Act 1958**, any will and any document to which this section applies, which has been deposited with the Registrar, must not be withdrawn from the deposit unless—\n\n(a) the Court has made an order under this section revoking the will; or\n\n(b) the person on whose behalf the will has been made has acquired or regained testamentary capacity.\n\n(5) A failure to comply with subsection (3) does not affect the validity of the will.\n\nS. 26  \namended by No. 38/2007 s. 3,  \nrepealed by No. 80/2014 s. 30.\n\n* * * * *\n\nS. 27 amended by No. 69/2009 s. 54(Sch. Pt 1 item 66.2), repealed by No. 80/2014 s. 30.\n\n* * * * *\n\nS. 28 amended by No. 80/2014 s. 48,  \nrepealed by No. 80/2014 s. 30.\n\n* * * * *\n\nS. 29 amended by Nos 52/1998 s. 311(Sch. 1 item 108), 18/2005 s. 18(Sch. 1 item 119), repealed by No. 80/2014 s. 30.\n\n* * * * *\n\n\t30 Recognition of statutory wills\n\n(1) A statutory will made according to the law of the place where the deceased was resident at the time of the execution of the will is deemed to be a valid will of the deceased.\n\n(2) In this section, ***statutory will*** means a will executed under a statutory provision on behalf of a person who, at the time of the execution, lacked testamentary capacity.\n\nDivision 3—Court authorised rectification of wills\n\n\t31 Can a will be rectified?\n\n(1) The Court may make an order to rectify a will to carry out the intentions of the testator, if the Court is satisfied that the will does not carry out the testator's intentions because—\n\n(a) a clerical error was made; or\n\n(b) the will does not give effect to the testator's instructions.\n\n(2) A person who wishes to make an application for an order under subsection (1) must apply to the Court within 6 months from the date of the grant of probate.\n\n(3) The Court may extend the period of time for making an application if the Court thinks this is necessary, even if the original period of time has expired, but not if the final distribution of the estate has been made.\n\n(4) If the personal representative makes a distribution to a beneficiary, the personal representative is not liable if—\n\n(a) the distribution is made—\n\n(i) to a person who is, at the date of the deceased's death, the spouse of the deceased; or\n\nS. 31(4)(a)(ii) amended by No. 27/2001 s. 3(Sch. 1 item 14.4).\n\n(ii) to the domestic partner or a child of the deceased—\n\nand is made—\n\n(iii) in good faith; and\n\n(iv) for the purpose of providing for the maintenance, support or education of the person to whom it is made; or\n\n(b) the distribution has been made—\n\nS. 31(4)(b)(i) amended by No. 80/2014 s. 49.\n\n(i) when the personal representative has not been aware of any application under this section or any application for a family provision order under Part IV of the **Administration and Probate Act 1958** having been made; and\n\n(ii) at least 6 months after the grant of probate.\n\nS. 32 amended by No. 43/1998  \ns. 53.\n\n\t32 Order to be attached to will\n\nThe Court must direct that a certified copy of an order under section 31 must be attached to the grant of probate or letters of administration with the will annexed (as the case requires) of the will to which the order relates, and the Court must retain the probate or letters of administration until the copy of the order is attached.\n\nPart 4—Construction of wills\n\nDivision 1—General rules about the construction of wills\n\n\t33 What interest in property does a will operate to dispose of?\n\nIf—\n\n(a) a testator has made a will disposing of property; and\n\n(b) after the making of the will and before his or her death, the testator disposes of an interest in that property—\n\nthe will operates to dispose of any remaining interest the testator has in that property.\n\n\t34 When does a will take effect?\n\n(1) A will takes effect, with respect to the property disposed of by the will, as if it had been executed immediately before the death of the testator.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if a contrary intention appears (whether in the will or elsewhere).\n\n\t35 What is the effect of a failure of a disposition?\n\n(1) If any disposition of property is ineffective, the will takes effect as if the property were part of the residuary estate of the testator.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if a contrary intention appears (whether in the will or elsewhere).\n\n(3) In this section ***disposition of property*** does not include the exercise of a power of appointment.\n\n\t36 When is evidence admissible to clarify a will?\n\n(1) In any proceedings to construe a will, if the language used in a will renders the will or any part of the will—\n\n(a) meaningless; or\n\n(b) uncertain or ambiguous on the face of the will; or\n\n(c) uncertain or ambiguous in the light of surrounding circumstances—\n\nevidence may be admitted to assist in the interpretation of that language.\n\n(2) Evidence which may be admitted under subsection (1)(c) does not include evidence of the testator's intention.\n\nS. 36(3) inserted by No. 43/1998  \ns. 54.\n\n(3) Nothing in this section prevents the admission of evidence which would otherwise be admissible at law in any proceedings to construe a will.\n\n\t37 What is the effect of a change in the testator's domicile?\n\nThe construction of a will is not altered by a change in the testator's domicile after he or she has executed the will.\n\n\t38 Income on contingent and future dispositions\n\nA contingent, future or deferred disposition of property, whether specific or residuary, includes any intermediate income of the property which has not been disposed of by the will.\n\n\t39 Beneficiaries must survive testator by 30 days\n\n(1) If a disposition is made to a person who dies within 30 days after the death of the testator, the will is to take effect as if the person had died before the testator.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if a contrary intention appears in the will.\n\n(3) A general requirement or condition that a beneficiary survive the testator is not a contrary intention for the purpose of this section.\n\nS. 39(4) amended by No. 80/2014 s. 50.\n\n(4) If the personal representative makes a distribution under the will to a person who is—\n\n(a) the spouse of the testator at the date of the testator's death; or\n\nS. 39(4)(b) amended by No. 27/2001 s. 3(Sch. 1 item 14.4).\n\n(b) the domestic partner or a child of the testator—\n\nwithin 30 days after the death of the testator, the personal representative is not liable if the distribution is made—\n\n(c) in good faith; and\n\n(d) for the purpose of providing for the maintenance, support or education of the person to whom it is made—\n\nwhether or not an application for a family provision order has been made under Part IV of the **Administration and Probate Act 1958** or under section 31 of this Act.\n\n(5) Any distribution made to a person under subsection (4) must be deducted from the share of the estate to which the person is entitled under the will, or, if the person does not survive the testator by 30 days, must be treated as an administration expense.\n\nDivision 2—Construction of particular provisions in wills\n\n\t40 What does a general disposition of land include?\n\n(1) A general disposition of land or of the land in a particular area includes leasehold land whether or not the testator owns freehold land.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if a contrary intention appears (whether in the will or elsewhere).\n\n\t41 What does a general disposition of property include?\n\n(1) A general disposition of—\n\n(a) all or the residue of the testator's property; or\n\n(b) all or the residue of his or her property of a particular description—\n\nincludes any property over which he or she has a general power of appointment exercisable by will and operates as an exercise of the power.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if a contrary intention appears (whether in the will or elsewhere).\n\n\t42 What is the effect of a disposition of real property without words of limitation?\n\n(1) A disposition of real property to a person without words of limitation is to be construed as passing the whole estate or interest of the testator in that property to that person.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if a contrary intention appears (whether in the will or elsewhere).\n\n\t43 How are dispositions to issue to operate?\n\n(1) A disposition to a person's issue, without limitation as to remoteness, must be distributed to that person's issue in the same manner as if that person had died intestate and as if that person had died leaving only issue surviving.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if a contrary intention appears in the will.\n\n\t44 How are requirements to survive with issue construed?\n\n(1) If there is a disposition to a person in a will which is expressed to fail if there is either—\n\n(a) a want or a failure of issue of that person either in his or her lifetime or at his or her death; or\n\n(b) an indefinite failure of issue of that person—\n\nthose words must be construed to mean a want or failure of issue in the person's lifetime or at the person's death and not an indefinite failure of his or her issue.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if a contrary intention appears in the will.\n\n(3) For the purposes of avoiding doubt, subsection (2) does not affect the operation of the rule against perpetuities.\n\n\t45 Dispositions not to fail because issue have died before the testator\n\n(1) If a person makes a disposition to any of his or her issue, where—\n\n(a) the disposition is not a disposition to which section 43 applies; and\n\n(b) one or more of the issue do not survive the testator for thirty days; and\n\n(c) the interest in the property is not determinable at or before the death of the issue—\n\nthe issue of the deceased issue who survive the testator for 30 days take the deceased issue's share of the disposition in place of the deceased issue in the same manner as if the testator had died intestate and as if the testator had died leaving only issue surviving.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) applies to dispositions to issue either as individuals or as members of a class.\n\n(3) Subsection (1) does not apply if a contrary intention appears in the will, but a general requirement or condition that a beneficiary survive the testator or attain a specified age does not indicate a contrary intention for the purposes of this section.\n\n(4) If an original beneficiary under a will—\n\n(a) is issue of the testator; and\n\n(b) did not survive the testator by 30 days; and\n\nS. 45(4)(c) amended by No. 43/1998  \ns. 55.\n\n(c) did not fulfil a contingency required by the will—\n\nsubsection (1) does not operate to entitle issue of that beneficiary to a disposition under the will.\n\n\t46 Construction of residuary dispositions\n\n(1) A disposition of the whole or of the residue of the estate of a testator which refers only to the real estate of the testator or only to the personal estate of the testator is to be construed to include both the real and personal estate of the testator.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if a contrary intention appears in the will.\n\n(3) If any part of—\n\n(a) a residuary disposition which is in fractional parts; or\n\n(b) a disposition of the whole of the estate which is in fractional parts—\n\nfails, the part that fails passes to the part which does not fail and, if there is more than one part which does not fail, to all those parts proportionately.\n\n(4) Subsection (3) does not apply if a contrary intention appears in the will.\n\n\t47 Dispositions to unincorporated associations of persons\n\n(1) A disposition—\n\n(a) to an unincorporated association of persons, which is not a charity; or\n\n(b) to or upon trust for the aims, objects or purposes of an unincorporated association of persons, which is not a charity; or\n\n(c) to or upon trust for the present and future members of an unincorporated association of persons, which is not a charity—\n\nhas effect as a disposition in augmentation of the general funds of the association.\n\n(2) Property which is or which is to be taken to be a disposition in augmentation of the general funds of an unincorporated association must be—\n\n(a) paid into the general fund of the association; or\n\n(b) transferred to the association; or\n\n(c) sold or otherwise disposed of on behalf of the association and the proceeds paid into the general fund of the association.\n\n(3) If—\n\n(a) the personal representative pays money to an association under a disposition, the receipt of—\n\n(i) the Treasurer; or\n\n(ii) a like officer, if the officer is not so named—\n\nof the association is an absolute discharge for that payment; or\n\n(b) the personal representative transfers property to an association under a disposition, the transfer of that property to a person or persons designated in writing by any two persons holding the offices of President, Chairman, Treasurer or Secretary or like officers, if those officers are not so named, is an absolute discharge to the personal representative for the transfer of that property.\n\n(4) Subsection (3) does not apply if a contrary intention appears in the will.\n\n(5) It is not an objection to the validity of a disposition to an unincorporated association of persons that—\n\n(a) a list of persons who were members of the association at the time the testator died cannot be compiled; or\n\n(b) that the members of the association have no power to divide assets of the association beneficially among themselves.\n\n\t48 Can a person, by will, delegate the power to dispose of property?\n\nA power or a trust to dispose of property, created by will, is not void on the ground that it is a delegation of the testator's power to make a will, if the same power or trust would be valid if made by the testator, by instrument during his or her lifetime.\n\nS. 49 amended by No. 43/1998  \ns. 56 (ILA  \ns. 39B(1)).\n\n\t49 What is the effect of referring to a valuation in a will?\n\n(1) If—\n\n(a) there is an express or implied requirement in a will that a valuation be made or accepted for any purpose; and\n\n(b) the will does not provide a method of calculating the valuation or the method of calculating the valuation is not provided for by the law of Victoria or of another jurisdiction—\n\nthe reference to the valuation in the will is to be construed as if it were a reference to a valuation of the property as at the testator's death made by a competent valuer.\n\nS. 49(2) inserted by No. 43/1998  \ns. 56.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if a contrary intention appears in the will.\n\nS. 49A inserted by No. 41/2017 s. 29.\n\n\t49A Effect of remuneration clause\n\nA remuneration clause in a will is void unless—\n\n(a) the testator gave written informed consent to the inclusion of the remuneration clause; and\n\n(b) that written informed consent was given by the testator before the will was executed.\n\nPart 5—General\n\n\t50 Who may see a will?\n\nA person who has possession and control of a will, a revoked will or a purported will of a deceased person must allow the following persons to inspect and make copies of the will (at their own expense)—\n\n(a) any person named or referred to in the will, whether as beneficiary or not;\n\n(b) any person named or referred to in any earlier will as a beneficiary;\n\n(c) any spouse of the testator at the date of the testator's death;\n\nS. 50(d) amended by No. 27/2001 s. 3(Sch. 1 item 14.4).\n\n(d) any domestic partner of the testator;\n\n(e) any parent, guardian or children of the deceased person;\n\n(f) any person who would be entitled to a share of the estate if the deceased person had died intestate;\n\n(g) any parent or guardian of a minor referred to in the will or who would be entitled to a share of the estate of the testator if the testator had died intestate;\n\n(h) any creditor or other person who has a claim at law or in equity against the estate of the deceased person and who produces evidence of that claim.\n\nS. 50A inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 87.\n\n\t50A Regulations\n\n(1) The Governor in Council may make regulations for or with respect to—\n\n(a) requirements for remote execution procedures and witnessing by audio visual link, including, but not limited to different requirements for—\n\n(i) different documents or classes of document; or\n\n(ii) different witnesses or classes of witness; or\n\n(iii) different testators or classes of testator; or\n\n(iv) different forms or processes for the use of electronic signatures or the use or form of documents in electronic formats;\n\n(b) forms;\n\n(c) fees;\n\n(d) persons or classes of person to be special witnesses;\n\n(e) prescribing penalties not exceeding 20 penalty units for a contravention of the regulations;\n\n(f) any other matter or thing required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed or necessary to be prescribed to give effect to this Act.\n\n(2) The regulations may—\n\n(a) be of general or limited application;\n\n(b) differ according to differences in time, place or circumstance;\n\n(c) leave any matter or thing to be from time to time determined, applied, dispensed with or regulated by a specified person;\n\n(d) provide in a specified case or class of cases for the exemption of persons or things or a class of persons or things from any of the provisions of the regulations whether—\n\n(i) unconditionally or on specified conditions; and\n\n(ii) either wholly or to the extent specified in the regulations.\n\nPart 6—Transitional and consequential provisions\n\n\t51 Repeal of Wills Act 1958\n\nThe **Wills Act 1958** is **repealed**.\n\n\t52 Transitional provisions\n\nS. 52(1) amended by No. 43/1998  \ns. 57(1).\n\n(1) This Act, other than sections 4, 8, 9, 10, 12, 31, 33, 34, 35, 37, 38, 40, 41, 42, 47, 48 and 49 applies only to wills made on or after the commencement of this section.\n\nS. 52(2) amended by No. 43/1998  \ns. 57(2).\n\n(2) The **Wills Act 1958**, as in force immediately before the commencement of this section, continues to apply to wills made before the commencement of this section, in so far as those wills do not come under the operation of subsection (3) or (5) or under the operation of the sections specified in subsection (4).\n\n(3) Section 14 applies to a will made before the commencement of this section, if the granting of the decree absolute of the dissolution of the marriage or the annulment of the marriage has taken place after the commencement of this section.\n\n(4) Sections 4, 8, 9, 10, 31, 33, 34, 35, 37, 38, 40, 41, 42, 47, 48 and 49 apply to wills whether or not they are executed before, on or after the commencement of this section, where the testator dies on or after that commencement.\n\nS. 52(5) inserted by No. 43/1998  \ns. 57(3).\n\n(5) Section 12 applies to the revocation, after the commencement of this section, of a will, whether made before, on or after that commencement.\n\nS. 52A inserted by No. 38/2007 s. 4.\n\n\t52A Transitional provision—Wills Amendment Act 2007\n\nSection 26, as amended by the **Wills Amendment Act 2007**, applies to an application for leave to apply for an order under section 21 made before the commencement of section 3 of the **Wills Amendment Act 2007** that has not been determined before that commencement.\n\nNew s. 53 inserted by No. 80/2014 s. 31.\n\n\t53 Transitional provision—Court authorised wills—Justice Legislation Amendment (Succession and Surrogacy) Act 2014\n\nDespite the amendment of this Act by Part 5 of the **Justice** **Legislation Amendment (Succession and Surrogacy) Act 2014**, Division 2 of Part 3 of this Act, as in force immediately before the commencement of Part 5 of that Act, continues to apply to an application or proceeding commenced under Division 2 of Part 3 before the amendment as if those amendments had not been made.\n\nNew s. 54 inserted by No. 80/2014 s. 31.\n\n\t54 Power to resolve transitional difficulties in proceeding—Justice Legislation Amendment (Succession and Surrogacy) Act 2014\n\n(1) If any difficulty arises because of the operation of Part 5 of the **Justice** **Legislation Amendment (Succession and Surrogacy) Act 2014** in relation to an application or a proceeding under this Act, the Court may make any order it considers appropriate to resolve the difficulty.\n\n(2) An order made under subsection (1)—\n\n(a) may be made on application of a party to the application or proceeding or on the Court's own motion; and\n\n(b) has effect despite any provision to the contrary made by or under any Act (other than the **Charter of Human Rights and Responsibilities Act 2006**).\n\nNew s. 55 inserted by No. 80/2014 s. 31, repealed by No. 88/1997 s. 55(4).\n\n* * * * *\n\nNew s. 56 inserted by No. 41/2017 s. 30.\n\n\t56 Transitional provision—Administration and Probate and Other Acts Amendment (Succession and Related Matters) Act 2017\n\nSection 49A only applies to a will executed on or after the commencement of that section.\n\nNew s. 57 inserted by No. 11/2021 s. 88.\n\n\t57 Transitional provisions—Justice Legislation Amendment (System Enhancements and Other Matters) Act 2021\n\nOn and from the commencement of Part 12 of the **Justice Legislation Amendment (System Enhancements and Other Matters) Act 2021**, any will or testamentary document executed or witnessed under this Act as modified by Part 5 of the COVID-19 Omnibus (Emergency Measures) (Electronic Signing and Witnessing) Regulations 2020 (as in force immediately before their revocation) continues to be a valid will or testamentary document despite that revocation.\n\nPt 7 (Heading and ss 53–61) amended by No. 43/1998  \ns. 58, repealed by No. 29/2011 s. 3(Sch. 1 item 110).\n\n* * * * *\n\nSch. inserted by No. 44/2012 s. 6.\n\nSchedule\n\nSection 19B\n\nAnnex to Convention providing a Uniform Law on the Form of an International Will 1973\n\nANNEX\n\nUNIFORM LAW ON THE FORM OF AN INTERNATIONAL WILL\n\n*Article 1*\n\n1. A will shall be valid as regards form, irrespective particularly of the place where it is made, of the location of the assets and of the nationality, domicile or residence of the testator, if it is made in the form of an international will complying with the provisions set out in Articles 2 to 5 hereafter.\n\n2. The invalidity of the will as an international will shall not affect its formal validity as a will of another kind.\n\n*Article 2*\n\nThis law shall not apply to the form of testamentary dispositions made by two or more persons in one instrument.\n\n*Article 3*\n\n1. The will shall be made in writing.\n\n2. It need not be written by the testator himself.\n\n3. It may be written in any language, by hand or by any other means.\n\n*Article 4*\n\n1. The testator shall declare in the presence of two witnesses and of a person authorized to act in connection with international wills that the document is his will and that he knows the contents thereof.\n\n2. The testator need not inform the witnesses, or the authorized person, of the contents of the will.\n\n*Article 5*\n\n1. In the presence of the witnesses and of the authorized person, the testator shall sign the will or, if he has previously signed it, shall acknowledge his signature.\n\n2. When the testator is unable to sign, he shall indicate the reason therefor to the authorized person who shall make note of this on the will. Moreover, the testator may be authorized by the law under which the authorized person was designated to direct another person to sign on his behalf.\n\n3. The witnesses and the authorized person shall there and then attest the will by signing in the presence of the testator.\n\n*Article 6*\n\n1. The signatures shall be placed at the end of the will.\n\n2. If the will consists of several sheets, each sheet shall be signed by the testator or, if he is unable to sign, by the person signing on his behalf or, if there is no such person, by the authorized person. In addition, each sheet shall be numbered.\n\n*Article 7*\n\n1. The date of the will shall be the date of its signature by the authorized person.\n\n2. This date shall be noted at the end of the will by the authorized person.\n\n*Article 8*\n\nIn the absence of any mandatory rule pertaining to the safekeeping of the will, the authorized person shall ask the testator whether he wishes to make a declaration concerning the safekeeping of his will. If so and at the express request of the testator the place where he intends to have his will kept shall be mentioned in the certificate provided for in Article 9.\n\n*Article 9*\n\nThe authorized person shall attach to the will a certificate in the form prescribed in Article 10 establishing that the obligations of this law have been complied with.\n\n*Article 10*\n\nThe certificate drawn up by the authorized person shall be in the following form or in a substantially similar form:\n\nCERTIFICATE\n\n(Convention of October 26, 1973)\n\n1. I, ....................... (name, address and capacity), a person authorized to act in connection with international wills\n\n2. Certify that on ....................... (date) at ....................... (place)\n\n3. (testator) ....................... (name, address, date and place of birth) in my presence and that of the witnesses\n\n4. (*a*).................. (name, address, date and place of birth)  \n(*b*).................. (name, address, date and place of birth)  \nhas declared that the attached document is his will and that he knows the contents thereof.\n\n5. I furthermore certify that:\n\n6. (*a*) in my presence and in that of the witnesses  \n(1) the testator has signed the will or has acknowledged his signature previously affixed.  \n*(2) following a declaration of the testator stating that he was unable to sign his will for the following reason .......................................  \n– I have mentioned this declaration on the will  \n* – the signature has been affixed by .................. (name, address)\n\n7. (*b*) the witnesses and I have signed the will;\n\n8. * (*c*) each page of the will has been signed by .................. and numbered;\n\n9. (*d*) I have satisfied myself as to the identity of the testator and of the witnesses as designated above;\n\n10. (*e*) the witnesses met the conditions requisite to act as such according to the law under which I am acting;\n\n11. * (*f*)  the testator has requested me to include the following statement concerning the safekeeping of his will: .................................................\n\n12. PLACE\n\n13. DATE\n\n14. SIGNATURE and, if necessary, SEAL\n\n*Article 11*\n\nThe authorized person shall keep a copy of the certificate and deliver another to the testator.\n\n*Article 12*\n\nIn the absence of evidence to the contrary, the certificate of the authorized person shall be conclusive of the formal validity of the instrument as a will under this Law.\n\n*Article 13*\n\nThe absence or irregularity of a certificate shall not affect the formal validity of a will under this Law.\n\n*Article 14*\n\nThe international will shall be subject to the ordinary rules of revocation of wills.\n\n*Article 15*\n\nIn interpreting and applying the provisions of this law, regard shall be had to its international origin and to the need for uniformity in its interpretation.\n\n___________________________\n\n* To be completed if appropriate.\n\n\n\nEndnotes\n\n1 General information\n\nSee [www.legislation.vic.gov.au](http://www.legislation.vic.gov.au) for Victorian Bills, Acts and current Versions of legislation and up-to-date legislative information.\n\n*Minister's second reading speech—*\n\n*Legislative Assembly: 9 October 1997*\n\n*Legislative Council: 12 November 1997*\n\nThe long title for the Bill for this Act was \"to re-state with amendments the law relating to wills in Victoria, to repeal the **Wills Act 1958** and to amend the **Administration and Probate Act 1958**.\"\n\nThe **Wills Act 1997** was assented to on 2 December 1997 and came into operation as follows:\n\nSections 1 and 2 on 2 December 1997: section 2(1); rest of Act on 20 July 1998: Government Gazette 16 July 1998 page 1924.\n\nINTERPRETATION OF LEGISLATION ACT 1984 (ILA)\n\nStyle changes\n\nSection 54A of the ILA authorises the making of the style changes set out in Schedule 1 to that Act.\n\nReferences to ILA s. 39B\n\nSidenotes which cite ILA s. 39B refer to section 39B of the ILA which provides that where an undivided section or clause of a Schedule is amended by the insertion of one or more subsections or subclauses, the original section or clause becomes subsection or subclause (1) and is amended by the insertion of the expression \"(1)\" at the beginning of the original section or clause.\n\nInterpretation\n\nAs from 1 January 2001, amendments to section 36 of the ILA have the following effects:\n\n• Headings\n\nAll headings included in an Act which is passed on or after 1 January 2001 form part of that Act. Any heading inserted in an Act which was passed before 1 January 2001, by an Act passed on or after 1 January 2001, forms part of that Act. This includes headings to Parts, Divisions or Subdivisions in a Schedule; sections; clauses; items; tables; columns; examples; diagrams; notes or forms. See section 36(1A)(2A).\n\n• Examples, diagrams or notes\n\nAll examples, diagrams or notes included in an Act which is passed on or after 1 January 2001 form part of that Act. Any examples, diagrams or notes inserted in an Act which was passed before 1 January 2001, by an Act passed on or after 1 January 2001, form part of that Act. See section 36(3A).\n\n• Punctuation\n\nAll punctuation included in an Act which is passed on or after 1 January 2001 forms part of that Act. Any punctuation inserted in an Act which was passed before 1 January 2001, by an Act passed on or after 1 January 2001, forms part of that Act. See section 36(3B).\n\n• Provision numbers\n\nAll provision numbers included in an Act form part of that Act, whether inserted in the Act before, on or after 1 January 2001. Provision numbers include section numbers, subsection numbers, paragraphs and subparagraphs. See section 36(3C).\n\n• Location of \"legislative items\"\n\nA \"legislative item\" is a penalty, an example or a note. As from 13 October 2004, a legislative item relating to a provision of an Act is taken to be at the foot of that provision even if it is preceded or followed by another legislative item that relates to that provision. For example, if a penalty at the foot of a provision is followed by a note, both of these legislative items will be regarded as being at the foot of that provision. See section 36B.\n\n• Other material\n\nAny explanatory memorandum, table of provisions, endnotes, index and other material printed after the Endnotes does not form part of an Act.  \nSee section 36(3)(3D)(3E).\n\n2 Table of Amendments\n\nThis publication incorporates amendments made to the **Wills Act 1997** by Acts and subordinate instruments.\n\n–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––\n\n**Wills Act 1997, No. 88/1997**\n\n| *Assent Date:* | 2.12.97 |\n| --- | --- |\n| *Commencement Date:* | S. 55(4) inserted on 1.1.15 by No. 80/2014 s. 31: Special Gazette (No. 400) 29.10.14 p. 2 |\n| *Note:* | S. 55(4) repealed s. 55 on 1.1.17 |\n| *Current State:* | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Wills Act 1997** |\n\n\n**Miscellaneous Acts (Omnibus No. 1) Act 1998, No. 43/1998**\n\n| Assent Date: | 26.5.98 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | Ss 52–57 on 26.5.98: s. 2(1); s. 58 on 20.7.98: s. 2(5) |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Wills Act 1997** |\n\n\n**Tribunals and Licensing Authorities (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act 1998, No. 52/1998**\n\n| Assent Date: | 2.6.98 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 311(Sch. 1 item 108) on 1.7.98: Government Gazette 18.6.98 p. 1512 |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Wills Act 1997** |\n\n\n**Statute Law Amendment (Relationships) Act 2001, No. 27/2001**\n\n| Assent Date: | 12.6.01 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 3(Sch. 1 item 14) on 28.6.01: Government Gazette 28.6.01 p. 1428 |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Wills Act 1997** |\n\n\n**Legal Profession (Consequential Amendments) Act 2005, No. 18/2005**\n\n| Assent Date: | 24.5.05 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 18(Sch. 1 item 119) on 12.12.05: Government Gazette 1.12.05 p. 2781 |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Wills Act 1997** |\n\n\n**Wills Amendment Act 2007, No. 38/2007**\n\n| Assent Date: | 14.8.07 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | Ss 3, 4 on 15.8.07: s. 2 |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Wills Act 1997** |\n\n\n**Relationships Act 2008, No. 12/2008**\n\n| Assent Date: | 15.4.08 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 73(1)(Sch. 1 item 66) on 1.12.08: s. 2(2) |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Wills Act 1997** |\n\n\n**Statute Law Amendment (Evidence Consequential Provisions) Act 2009, No. 69/2009**\n\n| Assent Date: | 24.11.09 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 54(Sch. Pt 1 item 66) on 1.1.10: s. 2(2) |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Wills Act 1997** |\n\n\n**Statute Law Revision Act 2011, No. 29/2011**\n\n| Assent Date: | 21.6.11 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 3(Sch. 1 item 110) on 22.6.11: s. 2(1) |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Wills Act 1997** |\n\n\n**Wills Amendment (International Wills) Act 2012, No. 44/2012**\n\n| *Assent Date:* | 27.6.12 |\n| --- | --- |\n| *Commencement Date:* | Ss 4–7 on 10.3.15: Special Gazette (No. 376) 21.10.14 p. 1 |\n| *Current State:* | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Wills Act 1997** |\n\n\n**Legal Profession Uniform Law Application Act 2014, No. 17/2014** (as amended by No. 8/2015)\n\n| *Assent Date:* | 25.3.14 |\n| --- | --- |\n| *Commencement Date:* | S. 160(Sch. 2 item 111) on 1.7.15: Special Gazette (No. 151) 16.6.15 p. 1 |\n| *Current State:* | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Wills Act 1997** |\n\n\n**Justice Legislation Amendment (Succession and Surrogacy) Act 2014, No. 80/2014**\n\n| Assent Date: | 21.10.14 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | Ss 27–31, 48–50 on 1.1.15: Special Gazette (No. 400) 29.10.14 p. 2 |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Wills Act 1997** |\n\n\n**Administration and Probate and Other Acts Amendment (Succession and Related Matters) Act 2017, No. 41/2017**\n\n| *Assent Date:* | 19.9.17 |\n| --- | --- |\n| *Commencement Date:* | Ss 28–30 on 1.11.17: s. 2(2) |\n| *Current State:* | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Wills Act 1997** |\n\n\n**Guardianship and Administration Act 2019, No. 13/2019**\n\n| Assent Date: | 4.6.19 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 221(Sch. 1 item 61) on 1.3.20: s. 2(2) |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Wills Act 1997** |\n\n\n**Justice Legislation Amendment (System Enhancements and Other Matters) Act 2021, No. 11/2021**\n\n| Assent Date: | 23.3.21 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | Ss 79–88 on 26.4.21: s. 2(2) |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Wills Act 1997** |\n\n\n–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––\n\n3 Amendments Not in Operation\n\nThis version does not contain amendments that are not yet in operation.\n\n4 Explanatory details\n\nNo entries at date of publication.","sortOrder":0}],"analysis":{"kimi_summary":{"_metrics":{"model":"kimi-k2.6","source":"moonshot-batch-reanalyse","citationCount":11,"completionTokens":2457},"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":7,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The Act has expanded significantly beyond its original 1997 purpose of restating Victorian wills law. Major additions include: a statutory wills regime for persons lacking testamentary capacity (2014), an international wills framework giving effect to the 1973 Washington Convention (2012), remote electronic execution and witnessing procedures using audio-visual links (2021), and modernised relationship definitions including registered relationships and domestic partners (2001–2008). These additions have transformed the Act from a domestic procedural restatement into a multi-layered statute dealing with cross-border succession, digital execution, and protective jurisdiction."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple defined terms in section 3 including 'domestic partner', 'special witness', and 'remote execution procedure'","Dual execution regimes: traditional physical witnessing and a detailed remote audio-visual link procedure with electronic signature provisions","Extensive cross-referencing to other statutes including the Administration and Probate Act 1958, Relationships Act 2008, Family Law Act 1975 and Guardianship and Administration Act 2019","Nested exceptions throughout (e.g., effects of marriage and divorce on wills, revocation methods, survival periods)","International wills regime incorporating the 1973 Washington Convention via a Schedule with certificate requirements","Court-authorised will procedures with detailed evidentiary requirements (section 21A), protective provisions and separate representation rules","Transitional provisions spanning multiple amending Acts over 24 years creating temporal layering and overlapping application rules"],"plain_english_summary":"This is the main Victorian law that governs how people make, change, cancel, and interpret **wills** (legal documents that say who gets your property when you die).\n\n**Who can make a will**\n- Most people must be at least **18 years old**.\n- **Married minors** can make, change, or cancel a will.\n- A minor who expects to marry can make a will, but it only works if the marriage actually happens.\n- The Supreme Court can also authorise a minor or a person who lacks **testamentary capacity** (the mental ability to understand what a will does) to make a will in special circumstances.\n\n**How to make a valid will**\n- The will must be **in writing**.\n- The person making the will (the **testator**) must sign it with the intention of making a will.\n- The signature must be made or acknowledged in front of **at least two witnesses** who are present at the same time.\n- The witnesses must then sign the will in front of the testator.\n- Victoria also allows a **remote execution procedure**: the will can be signed and witnessed using an **audio visual link** (like video conferencing) with a **special witness** (for example, a lawyer or justice of the peace), provided strict steps are followed.\n- Electronic signatures are allowed when using the remote procedure.\n- The Supreme Court can also approve a document as a valid will even if it does not meet these formal rules, if the Court is convinced the person intended it to be their will.\n\n**Marriage and divorce**\n- Getting **married** usually revokes (cancels) an existing will, unless the will was made in contemplation of that marriage.\n- **Divorce** revokes any gifts to the former spouse and usually removes them as executor, unless the will says otherwise.\n\n**Changing or cancelling a will**\n- A will can be cancelled by making a new will, by a signed written declaration, or by physically destroying it with the intention of revoking it.\n- A cancelled will can be **revived** (brought back) if it is re-signed properly or if a later document shows an intention to revive it.\n- Changes to a will after it is signed generally need to go through the same signing and witnessing process as the original will.\n\n**Wills made overseas and international wills**\n- A will made overseas is generally valid in Victoria if it was made according to the law of the place where it was signed, the place where the person lived, or the person's nationality.\n- Victoria also recognises **international wills** made under a United Nations Convention, provided they are signed in front of an authorised person (such as a lawyer or public notary) and two witnesses.\n\n**Court involvement**\n- The Supreme Court can authorise a will on behalf of someone who does not have testamentary capacity, but only after being satisfied the proposed will reflects what that person would have wanted.\n- The Court can also **rectify** (fix) a will that contains a clerical error or does not properly reflect the person's instructions.\n\n**How wills are interpreted**\n- The Act includes rules about what common phrases mean (for example, what happens if a gift fails, what \"issue\" or \"children\" means, and how long a beneficiary must survive the testator).\n- Unless a will says otherwise, a beneficiary must survive the testator by **30 days** to receive a gift.\n- If a gift to a beneficiary fails, it usually falls into the **residue** (what is left over) of the estate.\n\n**General matters**\n- Certain people are entitled to inspect or copy a deceased person's will, including beneficiaries, spouses, domestic partners, children, parents, and creditors.\n- A clause allowing an executor to be paid for their services is void unless the testator gave written informed consent before the will was signed.\n\n**Why it matters**\nThis Act sets out the essential ground rules for one of the most common legal documents people make. It balances formal requirements to prevent fraud with modern flexibility (such as remote witnessing), and provides protections for vulnerable people who cannot make a will by themselves."},"summary":{"complexity_score":6,"scope_assessment":{"changed":false,"description":"Based on the available information, the Act appears to remain focused on its original intent: consolidating and modernising the law of wills in Victoria. There is no indication of significant scope creep beyond its core purpose of regulating the making, validity, and interpretation of wills."},"complexity_factors":["Intersects with multiple areas of law including family law, probate law, and succession law","Contains provisions for both formal and informal will-making, requiring understanding of when exceptions apply","Rules around mental capacity and undue influence involve subjective legal judgments","Interaction with marriage, divorce, and de facto relationship status adds complexity","Court discretion provisions (e.g. admitting non-compliant wills to probate) create uncertainty","Technical rules around witnessing, alterations, and revocation can have significant consequences if misunderstood","Limited source material provided prevents full assessment of all provisions"],"plain_english_summary":"## Wills Act 1997 (Victoria)\n\n**What is this?**\nThis is Victoria's primary law governing how people write, sign, and manage their wills (legal documents that say what happens to your belongings after you die).\n\n**Who does it affect?**\n- Anyone in Victoria who wants to make or update a will\n- Families and beneficiaries (people who receive assets) of deceased people\n- Lawyers and legal professionals handling estates (the total assets a person leaves behind)\n- Executors (people appointed to carry out the instructions in a will)\n\n**Why does it matter?**\nThis law sets the rules for:\n- **How a valid will must be made** — including signing and witnessing requirements\n- **Who can make a will** — age requirements and mental capacity rules\n- **What happens if rules aren't followed** — courts may still recognise an informal will in certain circumstances\n- **Changing or revoking (cancelling) a will** — including what happens to a will when you marry or divorce\n- **Interpreting wills** — how courts work out what you meant if your will is unclear\n\n**The practical bottom line:** If you don't follow the rules in this Act, your will could be challenged or declared invalid, meaning the government's default rules (intestacy laws) decide who gets your assets — which may not be what you wanted."},"flash_summary":{"complexity_score":7,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The Act restates and updates the prior Wills Act framework (s 1) and has expanded operational scope since original enactment: it adds a statutory remote execution procedure allowing electronic signatures and audio‑visual witnessing (ss 7(5)–(7); 8A–8D), adopts an international uniform will Annex (ss 19A–19E; Schedule), and increases court‑based pathways for making, authorising and rectifying wills for minors and persons lacking testamentary capacity (Part 3, ss 20–25, 31). It also confers regulatory power to prescribe detailed rules, fees and classes of special witnesses (s 50A), thereby broadening administrative control over procedural aspects of will execution and witnessing."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple interacting execution regimes: traditional in‑person signing (s 7) and detailed remote execution procedure with electronic signatures (ss 7(5)–(7), 8A–8D).","Significant Court discretion and procedures for non‑standard wills (ss 9, 20–25, 31) requiring evidentiary material (s 21A) and Registrar involvement (ss 20(6), 25(1)).","Cross‑references to other statutes and external law (Administration and Probate Act 1958, Guardianship and Administration Act 2019, Family Law Act 1975, international Convention Annex in Schedule).","Detailed construction rules and exceptions across many sections (Parts 4, Divs 1–2) governing survivorship, residuary gifts, unincorporated associations, and foreign wills (ss 33–49, 17–19).","Transitional and phased commencement provisions with historical amendments and specified operative dates (Part 6; Endnotes and Table of Amendments).","Regulatory delegation and potential for variable application (s 50A permits detailed regulations, classes of special witnesses, fees and exemptions).","Procedural technicalities that can be determinative (e.g. which document is the will after a remote procedure, s 8B(1)–(3); evidence of testamentary intent under s 9)."],"plain_english_summary":"# What this law does, who it affects, and how it works\n\nThis Act restates the law about wills in Victoria and sets out the rules for making, changing, revoking and interpreting wills (s 1). It also creates court processes for making or fixing wills in special circumstances and implements an international uniform will option (Parts 2–4; ss 19A–19E; Part 3). Below is a concise, practical description of the main mechanics, who makes decisions, who bears costs or burdens, and the likely effects on private behaviour.\n\n- Making a valid will\n  - A will must be in writing and signed by the testator (or by someone at the testator's direction) and witnessed by at least two witnesses who sign in the testator's presence (s 7). A statement saying the will was executed properly is not required (s 7(2)).\n  - The Act treats codicils and other testamentary writings the same as wills (s 3(2)).\n\n- Remote execution (electronic and audiovisual witnessing)\n  - The Act permits a prescribed \"remote execution procedure\" for executing, altering or revoking wills, including use of electronic signatures and witnessing by audio‑visual link (ss 7(5)–(7), 8A–8D). The remote procedure must be completed the same day and within Victoria (s 8A(3)).\n  - One witness in a remote execution must be a \"special witness\" (an Australian legal practitioner, a JP under the Honorary Justices Act, or a prescribed class) and that special witness must check and sign last and include statements on the document (s 8A(2), (6)–(7); s 3 definition of special witness).\n  - The document checked and signed by the special witness is the effective will; counterpart or unsigned copies are not (s 8B(1), (3)). Consent is required before any audiovisual recording of the remote procedure (s 8C).\n\n- Court powers and exceptions\n  - The Supreme Court may admit to probate documents not executed according to formalities if it is satisfied the deceased intended the document as their will, or may treat imperfect revocations as valid if intended (s 9). The Registrar may exercise these powers in limited, consent or low‑value cases (s 9(5)).\n  - The Court can authorise wills for minors, or for people who lack testamentary capacity, and may approve terms or impose conditions (ss 20, 21). Wills authorised by the Court must be deposited with the Registrar and in some cases signed and sealed by the Registrar (ss 20(6)–(7), 25(1)–(4)).\n  - The Court can rectify a will to give effect to the testator's intentions for clerical errors or where the will does not reflect instructions; applications are generally within 6 months of probate (ss 31–32).\n\n- Family events and construction rules\n  - Marriage generally revokes a will, with specific saved dispositions and exceptions (s 13). Divorce revokes dispositions to the former spouse and certain appointments unless the testator intended otherwise; a revoked disposition is treated as if the spouse predeceased the testator (s 14).\n  - The Act sets rules for how various kinds of dispositions are interpreted (e.g. residuary gifts, gifts to unincorporated associations, dispositions to issue), survival periods (30 days) and how foreign or international wills are treated (Part 4; Divs 6–7; ss 17–19E).\n\n- Access, regulation and administrative matters\n  - People with an interest in the will (named persons, spouses, domestic partners, parents, intestacy claimants, creditors) may inspect and copy the will from whoever controls it (s 50).\n  - The Governor in Council may make regulations about remote execution, forms, fees, persons who can be special witnesses, and may prescribe penalties up to 20 penalty units (s 50A).\n\nClaims about purpose and a practical test of trade‑offs\n\n- The Act is explicitly described as a restatement and update of wills law (s 1). That purpose is implemented by: clarifying execution formalities (s 7), adding a statutory remote execution route (ss 7(5)–(7), 8A–8D), enabling Court authorisation and rectification (Parts 3 and 31), and adopting the international wills Annex (ss 19A–19E).\n\n- Costs and incentives borne by private parties\n  - Compliance burdens for testators: following formal signing and witnessing requirements, or the detailed remote procedure which requires same‑day steps and statements on the document (s 8A(3)–(7)); potential need to engage a special witness (s 8A(2); s 3 special witness definition).\n  - Costs for personal representatives and applicants: Court applications (Parts 3, 31), possible Registrar services (s 9(5), ss 20(6)–(7), 25(1)–(4)), and regulatory fees if prescribed (s 50A(1)(c)).\n\n- Concentrated decision authority and discretion\n  - The Supreme Court has broad discretion to admit imperfect documents, authorise statutory wills, and rectify wills (ss 9, 21, 31). The Governor in Council can make detailed regulations shaping remote execution and fees (s 50A). These mechanisms centralise certain decisions with courts and regulators and create procedural gates (e.g. Registrar involvement for court‑authorised wills, ss 20(6), 25(1)).\n\n- Implementation risks and substitution effects\n  - The remote execution route relaxes the in‑person requirement but imposes detailed steps (s 8A). If those steps are not followed, only the document signed and checked by the special witness is the valid will (s 8B(1)–(3)), which raises a technical risk if participants misunderstand the process.\n  - The Act permits probate admission of informal testamentary documents where intent is shown (s 9), which reduces losses from strict formal invalidity but increases evidentiary litigation about intent (s 9(3)).\n\n- Effects on legal service providers and markets\n  - The role of \"special witnesses\" (s 3) and court applications (Parts 3, 31) creates demand for Australian legal practitioners and for officials (Registrar, JPs) to be involved in execution or court processes.\n  - Regulations may create classes of special witnesses, fees and forms (s 50A), which can affect service costs and how market participants supply witnessing and will‑preparation services.\n\nIn short: the Act sets a detailed, primarily formal legal framework for wills; it modernises execution by allowing a tightly prescribed remote process, preserves court pathways for non‑standard cases, and provides construction and family‑event rules that determine how dispositions operate and are enforced (see ss 7, 8A–8D, 9, 13–14, 21, 31, 50A)."}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/wills-act-1997","history":"/api/acts/wills-act-1997/history","analysis":"/api/acts/wills-act-1997/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/wills-act-1997/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/wills-act-1997/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/wills-act-1997/documents"}}