Status: Completed
Project overview
Te Aka Matua o te Ture | Law Commission reviewed the law of succession – the system of rules that governs who gets a person’s property when they die.
In mid-2019, the Government referred succession law to the Commission to review. This followed on from our review of the Property (Relationships) Act 1976 (the PRA review) which considered the division of property when a couple separates. In the PRA review, we concluded that a surviving partner’s relationship property entitlements could not be reviewed in isolation from the claims and entitlements of others to a deceased person’s estate. We therefore recommended that the Commission review succession law so that the Government could fully consider the law relating to relationship property division. The Government accepted this recommendation.
Many of the statutes we have reviewed were enacted in the middle of last century and have not been reviewed for decades. Societal attitudes towards family have changed significantly since then. Families are now more diverse. There is also increased recognition of te Tiriti o Waitangi | the Treaty of Waitangi and tikanga Māori as an independent source of rights and obligations in Aotearoa New Zealand. Overwhelmingly, the law we have reviewed does not adequately recognise the Crown’s obligations under te Tiriti nor does it adequately recognise tikanga Māori.
The Report recommends the repeal of several statutes and the enactment of a new Act. The new Act, the Inheritance (Claims Against Estates) Act, should be the principal source of law relating to entitlements to and claims against a deceased person’s estate. The Report also covers more technical matters such as which courts should have jurisdiction over what matters, what property should be available to meet those claims and entitlements, and cross-border issues. The Report also makes recommendations to assist parties in resolving succession disputes.
We have recommended the following major changes.
Family provision
Currently, close family members of the deceased can challenge a will by arguing that the deceased failed to fulfil their “moral duty” to provide for the family members in the will. Such a claim can also be made when there is no will and the estate is distributed under the intestacy rules. The objectives of the current law, the Family Protection Act 1955, are not sufficiently clear to satisfy modern legislative drafting standards and we have recommended that the Act be repealed. In its place, we have recommended that surviving partners and children of the deceased can apply for family provision awards. We recommended that a surviving partner should be able to claim family provision where the partner has insufficient resources to maintain a reasonable independent standard of living, having regard to the economic disadvantages arising from the relationship for the surviving partner.
We presented two options in the Report regarding family provision for children of the deceased. Under the first option, the deceased’s children and grandchildren of all ages should be eligible to claim family provision if the deceased has unjustly failed to:
- provide for the child or grandchild if they are in financial need; or
- recognise the child or grandchild.
Under the second option, only the deceased’s children under 25 years of age or those who are disabled would be eligible to claim. For both options, a child of the deceased would include whāngai, when this accords with the tikanga of the relevant whānau, and an “accepted child” for whom the deceased had assumed, in an enduring way, the responsibilities of a parent.
The feedback we received during consultation showed strongly divided views on when it should be appropriate to disrupt a will-maker’s testamentary intentions to make further provision for family members, particularly in relation to adult children of the will-maker. Because of these conflicting opinions, we have provided the Government with these two reform options to
consider.
Relationship property entitlements
We have recommended that, despite what provision is available to a surviving partner of a deceased under the deceased’s will or the intestacy rules, the surviving partner should continue to be entitled to choose to divide their relationship property. They should get the same share of relationship property as they would get had the couple separated during their lives. However, to ensure the least disruption to the will-maker’s wishes, we recommended that the surviving partner should first receive whatever gifts are made for them under the will and then receive a “top-up” amount to the full value of their entitlement.
Distribution of intestate estates
When a person dies without a will, their estate is distributed in accordance with the intestacy rules in the Administration Act 1969. We have concluded some of these rules are outdated. They are difficult to follow and do not respond to the increasing diversity of New Zealand families. We have recommended the rules be rewritten in modern language and changed in several respects. The recommended changes include:
- Intestate estates should be divided in fixed proportions between family members instead of giving a surviving partner a fixed cash sum regardless of the size of the estate.
- Where a deceased is survived by their partner and children, the partner should take the whole estate when the children are from the relationship between the deceased and the surviving partner. When the deceased leaves one or more children from a different relationship to the surviving partner, the surviving partner should be entitled to half the estate and the deceased’s children should share evenly in the other half.
- If there are whāngai relationships within the deceased’s whānau, or the deceased themself is a whāngai, the tikanga of the relevant whānau should determine which individuals are entitled to inherit the estate.
Claims against property outside an estate
Generally, when someone claims against an estate, the law only empowers the court to make awards from the property of the estate. However, the property a person may have owned during their life may not fall into their estate when they die. For example, property the deceased owned as a joint tenant with others will accrue by survivorship to the surviving joint tenant(s) when the deceased dies. Another example is where a person settles property on trust to benefit individuals of their choosing rather than passing property to those individuals through their will and estate.
Situations can arise where entitlements to or claims against an estate may be defeated because the deceased’s property has not fallen into their estate. We have concluded this is unsatisfactory and there should be some ability for the court to recover property in certain circumstances. We have recommended that the court should have power to recover property to satisfy awards against an estate where:
- the property has been disposed of to defeat an entitlement or claim against an estate; or
- the property is a deceased’s joint tenancy interest that has accrued to the surviving joint tenant(s) when the deceased has died with the effect of defeating an entitlement or claim against an estate.
In either case, the court should only recover the property necessary to satisfy the award it wished to make. The court should not order the recovery of property when the recipient received it in good faith and gave valuable consideration or received it in good faith and it is unjust to order that the property be recovered.
Te ao Māori
The Report seeks to weave new law that includes te ao Māori perspectives. We have concluded that te Tiriti o Waitangi requires the Crown to exercise kāwanatanga in a responsible manner, including facilitating the exercise of tino rangatiratanga in specific circumstances. The recommendations for the reform of succession law do this from three starting points.
First, the law should enable Māori to live according to tikanga. In the context of succession, this promotes the application of tikanga by and within whānau. Some of the Commission’s recommendations, for example, require the court to consider the tikanga of the relevant whānau when exercising its powers.
Second, state succession law should weave new law that reflects tikanga Māori and other values shared by New Zealanders (a “third law”). This is a deeply important approach to law-making in Aotearoa New Zealand to support a nation grounded in the commitments of te Tiriti, to the benefit of all New Zealanders. An example of this in the Report is the reliance on aspects of
tikanga relating to mana to support partners making agreements about rights in respect of their estates when they die instead of having those rights determined by the relevant statutes.
Third, kāwanatanga should recognise its own limits by not applying state law to taonga. Instead, we have recommended that tikanga Māori should continue to govern succession to taonga, and the appropriate role of state law in relation to taonga should be limited to facilitating the resolution of disputes in accordance with tikanga Māori. Taonga should not be available to meet any claim or entitlement under the new Act or the new intestacy rules, and the extent to which a disposition of taonga within a will should have effect should be determined in accordance with tikanga Māori.
Families in Aotearoa New Zealand have become more diverse since many of the laws we have reviewed were enacted. One example of this is that re-partnering and blended families have become much more common. Obligations to provide for certain family members on death can become more complex in blended families. Usually, this complexity arises from the potentially competing interests of a surviving partner and the deceased’s children from a prior relationship. We have sought to provide recommendations that respond to the increasing diversity in family arrangements. We have recommended changing how the family home is shared between partners if there is a division of relationship property. If the family home was owned by one partner before the relationship began or was received as a third-party gift or inheritance, only the increase in the value of the home during the relationship should be shared.
We have recommended a wider definition of children eligible to claim family provision awards than currently set out in the Family Protection Act. Children for whom the deceased had assumed, in an enduring way, the responsibilities of a parent would be eligible. This would allow some stepchildren to claim. Tamariki whāngai would also be eligible when that accords with the tikanga of the relevant whānau.
We have recommended repealing the prescribed amount allocated to partners in an intestacy. Instead, we have recommended having different rules depending on whether the deceased’s children are of the relationship with the surviving partner. Where one or more of the deceased’s children are of another relationship, we have recommended that the deceased’s partner takes the household items that the couple used wholly or principally for family purposes (the family chattels) and 50 per cent of the remaining estate, and the deceased’s children share evenly in the remaining 50 per cent.
No. It is up to the Government whether to accept the Commission’s recommendations and to implement and resulting changes. See the Government response to He arotake i te āheinga ki ngā rawa a te tangata ka mate ana | Review of succession law:
rights to a person’s property on death (NZLC R145, 2021).
Ā mātou kawerongo
Our news
Law Commission recommends new law about who inherits property when someone dies
Media Release | 15 December 2021
Law Commission proposes changes to succession law
Media Release | 15 April 2021
Is it OK to cut the kids out of your will?
Media Release | 19 August 2020
Law Commission’s review of succession law: Practitioner survey
Media Release | 16 April 2020
Law Commission to review law about who inherits property when someone dies
18 December 2019
He rongo pāpāho
In the media
Jeremy Sutton: Review of succession law - Rights to a person's property on death
21 December 2021
Laws not fit for modern blended families: Law Commission
15 December 2021
RNZ Review of Succession Law discussed on The Panel with Sally Wenley and David Cormack (part 2) (at 1m41s)
17 December 2021
RNZ Why the Law Commission is reviewing succession law
30 May 2021
Status: Completed
Terms of reference
The review will include (but not be limited to) consideration of:
- who should be entitled to claim property despite what the deceased said in their will, with a particular focus on a surviving spouse or partner and other members of the deceased’s family;
- who should be entitled to share in property when a person dies without a will, with a particular focus on a surviving spouse or partner and other members of the deceased’s family;
- what the policy justifications should be for such entitlements;
- what property should be available to meet entitlements;
- how succession law should address areas of particular concern to Māori;
- ancillary and procedural matters.
The review will require consideration of various statutes including the:
- Property (Relationships) Act 1976
- Family Protection Act 1955
- Law Reform (Testamentary Promises) Act 1949
- Administration Act 1969.
The Law Commission will not review the regime for succession to Māori land under Te Ture Whenua Māori Act 1993 but will consider questions relating to succession generally that may be of particular concern to Māori. In doing so, the Law Commission may comment on aspects of Te Ture Whenua Māori Act 1993.
The Law Commission will refer to its previous work including Succession Law: A Succession (Adjustment) Act (NZLC, R39, 1997) and Review of the Property (Relationships) Act 1976 – Te Arotake i te Property (Relationships) Act 1976 (NZLC, R143, 2019).
The Law Commission will hold a public consultation process. The Law Commission intends to report to the Minister with its recommendations by the end of 2021.
Status: Completed
Issues Paper
He arotake i te āheinga ki ngā rawa a te tangata ka mate ana | Review of succession law: Rights to a person’s property on death (NZLC IP46, 2021)
Te Aka Matua o te Ture | Law Commission published an Issues Paper and consultation website in its Review of Succession Law. The Issues Paper identifies issues with the current law and presents detailed proposals for reform. The website was designed to engage with the public and explained the law alongside practical examples.
The Issues Paper is divided into three parts.
Part One examines the basis for good succession law in contemporary Aotearoa New Zealand. It considers both a conventional state law approach to succession law and an ao Māori approach to succession. It presents a framework for considering how Māori might exercise tino rangatiratanga and tikanga over succession matters. We offer a preliminary view that there should be a single, comprehensive statute that governs claims against estates.
Part Two examines substantive entitlements to and claims against an estate. It considers the current law and issues arising, and presents several options for reform in relation to:
- Relationship property entitlements of a surviving partner
- Family provision claims
- Entitlements of someone who has contributed to a deceased person or their estate
- Intestacy entitlements
The Issues Paper considers these areas from an ao Māori perspective and asks how tikanga Māori might respond. The Paper also asks whether succession to taonga should be governed by tikanga and not general succession law.
Part Three considers making and resolving claims. It considers the current law and the issues arising, and proposes options for reform in relation to matters such as priorities and anti-avoidance mechanisms, contracting out and settlement agreements, and dispute resolution in and out of court.
Te Whare Wānanga o Ōtākou | University of Otago (University of Otago), funded through the Michael and Suzanne Borrin Foundation, surveyed public attitudes and values towards succession issues and the Commission refers to the results throughout the Issues Paper. See the survey report.
Submissions
Te Aka Matua o te Ture | Law Commission invited members of the public to share their views during its review of succession law in relation to the matters discussed in its Issues Paper and consultation website published in April 2021.
The Commission received over 200 submissions from individuals and organisations. The submissions were invaluable as we considered the issues and formulated our recommendations for reform. We refer to the submissions throughout our Report.
The submissions can be viewed below.
In the Issues Paper and consultation website we advised submitters that we would publish submissions once the final report was published. Accordingly, the names of individual submitters have been published where provided but we have removed some personal information. The information removed includes, for example, contact details, financial information, names of third parties or personal information about those parties. Some submissions that consist of entirely personal information have not been published nor have the names of those submitters.