LRB-4667/1
PJK:kmg:hmh
1997 - 1998 LEGISLATURE
January 15, 1998 - Introduced by Representatives Green and Hubler. Referred
to Committee on Judiciary.
AB720,3,6 1An Act to repeal 632.485, 700.17 (2) (b) 2., 701.27 (1) (b), 701.27 (1) (d), 701.27
2(2) (b) 2., 701.27 (3) (b), 701.27 (6) (title), 701.27 (6) (d), 701.27 (9), 851.001,
3851.51 (title), 851.51 (3), 852.01 (1) (e), 852.01 (1) (g), 852.03 (2), 853.16 (title),
4853.51 (2), 858.01 (2), 861.13 and 861.41 (3) and (4); to renumber 701.27 (1)
5(intro.), 701.27 (2) (title), 701.27 (2) (b) (title), 701.27 (2) (bm), 701.27 (2) (d),
6701.27 (3) (title), 701.27 (3) (a) 4., 701.27 (4) (title), 701.27 (4) (c), 701.27 (4) (d),
7701.27 (8) (title), 767.266 (title), 851.35, 853.16 (1), 853.51 (intro.) and 858.01
8(1); to renumber and amend 700.17 (2) (b) 1., 701.27 (title), 701.27 (1) (a),
9701.27 (1) (c), 701.27 (2) (a), 701.27 (2) (b) 1., 701.27 (2) (c), 701.27 (2) (e), 701.27
10(3) (a) (intro.), 701.27 (3) (a) 1., 701.27 (3) (a) 2., 701.27 (3) (a) 3., 701.27 (4) (a),
11701.27 (4) (b), 701.27 (4) (e), 701.27 (5), 701.27 (6) (a), 701.27 (6) (b) (title),
12701.27 (6) (b), 701.27 (6) (c), 701.27 (7), 701.27 (8), 767.266, 851.51 (1) and (2),
13852.01 (1) (f), 852.05 (1), 853.03 (2), 853.07 (2), 853.11 (1) (b), 853.15 (1), 853.16
14(2), 853.51 (1), 861.31 (1), 861.31 (4), 861.35 (1) and 861.35 (3); to consolidate,

1renumber and amend
853.11 (1) (intro.) and (a); to amend 6.875 (1) (b), 48.92
2(3), 146.34 (1) (j), 157.061 (7), 178.21 (3) (e), 242.01 (11), 252.15 (1) (eg), 615.03
3(1) (c), 700.17 (2) (a), 701.20 (5) (b) 1., 702.08, 766.575 (3) (b), 766.58 (3) (f),
4766.587 (6), 766.589 (7), 766.61 (2) (c) 2., 815.56, 851.002, 851.13, 851.27, 852.01
5(1) (intro.), 852.01 (1) (a) 2., 852.01 (1) (b) and (d), 852.05 (2), 852.05 (3), 852.13,
6853.03 (intro.), 853.03 (1), 853.11 (1) (title), 853.25 (2), 853.25 (4), 853.25 (5),
7853.29, 853.50 (1), 853.50 (3), 853.55 (NOTICE) 6., 853.55 (NOTICE) 9., 853.56
8(NOTICE) 7., 853.56 (NOTICE) 9., 853.59 (form) (a), 853.59 (form) (2) (a),
9857.01, 857.015, 858.01 (title), 859.40, 859.41, 861.015 (1), 861.015 (3) (intro.),
10861.015 (3) (a), 861.015 (3) (b), 861.31 (2), 861.33 (title), 861.33 (1) (a) (intro.),
11861.33 (1) (a) 4., 861.33 (1) (b), 861.33 (2), 861.33 (3), 861.33 (4), 861.35 (title),
12861.35 (2), 863.37 (1), 880.32 and 880.695 (1); to repeal and recreate 700.11,
13700.12, 702.03 (1), subchapter II (title) of chapter 705 [precedes 705.20],
14851.055, 851.55, 852.01 (2), 852.01 (2m), 852.03 (1), 852.03 (3), 852.03 (4),
15852.09, 852.11, 853.05, 853.11 (2), 853.11 (3), 853.11 (3m), 853.11 (6), 853.13,
16853.19, 853.25 (1), 853.27, 853.33, 853.35, 853.40, 853.55 (Article 3) 3.3., 853.56
17(Article 3) 3.4., subchapter II (title) of chapter 861 [precedes 861.018], 861.02,
18861.03, 861.05, 861.07, 861.09, 861.11, 863.11, 863.13, 895.43 and 895.435; and
19to create 632.695, 700.17 (2) (am), 700.26, 701.115, 701.25, 701.26, 702.22,
20705.09, 705.20 (3), subchapter III (title) of chapter 705 [precedes 705.21],
21705.31, 706.105, 766.58 (3m), 767.266 (title), 767.266 (1) (b), 767.266 (2),
22subchapter I (title) of chapter 851 [precedes 851.002], 851.035, 851.065, 851.30,
23851.31, subchapter II (title) of chapter 851 [precedes 851.40], 851.50, 852.01 (1)
24(f) 1., 852.01 (1) (f) 2., 852.01 (1) (f) 3., 852.03 (5) and (6), 852.05 (4), 852.10,
25852.12, subchapter I (title) of chapter 853 [precedes 853.01], 853.03 (2) (a), (b)

1and (c), 853.04, 853.07 (2) (c), 853.11 (1) (bm), 853.32, 853.325, 853.41,
2subchapter II (title) of chapter 853 [precedes 853.50], 853.51 (1) (bc), 853.51
3(2m), chapter 854, 856.05 (5), 856.16, 861.018, 861.04, 861.06, 861.08, 861.10,
4subchapter III (title) of chapter 861 [precedes 861.17], 861.21, 861.31 (1c),
5861.31 (4) (a), 861.33 (1) (c), 861.35 (1c), 861.35 (3) (e), 861.35 (4) (a) and 861.43
6of the statutes; relating to: changes to the probate code.
Analysis by the Legislative Reference Bureau
This bill updates the probate code in light of the proposals of the 1990 uniform
probate code (UPC). It does not adopt the UPC itself but draws on its general
principles and language to meld the UPC to this state's situation. The bill addresses
5 general areas.
1. Implementation of the intent of the decedent
The bill reduces some of the formality that is required for will execution. For
example, under current law 2 witnesses must sign the will in the presence of the
testator and in the presence of each other, but under this bill the witnesses may sign
individually, within a reasonable time after witnessing either the testator's signing
or his or her acknowledgement of the signature or the will. Also, under current law,
a witness or his or her spouse who is also a beneficiary under the will may receive
an amount no greater than that which would be received under intestacy, even if the
witness' participation is innocent and there is no evidence of wrongdoing. Under the
bill, there is no reduction in the amount that may be received if the will is also signed
by 2 disinterested witnesses or if there is sufficient evidence that the testator
intended the full transfer under the will.
The bill decreases the formality of some aspects of will construction. Under the
traditional law of wills, a will may be interpreted only by using information
contained "within the 4 corners of the document". The bill provides that evidence
outside the will may be introduced to aid in its interpretation when certain rules of
construction are applied.
The bill also modifies the definition of "representation", which governs the
disposition of property in the event that some members of a class of relatives survive
the decedent and other members of the class predecease the decedent.
2. Uniformity among the states and attention to current public expectations
With respect to intestacy, changes made primarily for updating and uniformity
purposes include division of ancestors into maternal and paternal groups; limitation
of the rights of remote relatives; clarification of rights when an heir is related to the
decedent by 2 lines; and increased ability for a testator to disinherit relatives when
part of the estate is governed by a will and part is intestate.

With respect to wills, changes made primarily for updating and uniformity
purposes include changes in the rights of the surviving spouse if the decedent's will
predates the marriage; provision of a "self-proving will" feature, which should
facilitate admission of a Wisconsin will in other jurisdictions; clarification of what
happens when a subsequent will or codicil does not obviously revoke the previous
instrument; and codification of the doctrine of "incorporation by reference", which
applies when a will seeks to include a separate document that does not itself meet
the will execution requirements.
3. Merger of rules of interpretation for probate and nonprobate transfers
This bill merges rules of interpretation governing probate and nonprobate
transfers, primarily by applying well-established probate rules of construction to
nonprobate documents. These rules deal with such issues as what happens to a gift
when the beneficiary does not survive, and the decedent did not make an alternate
provision ("antilapse"); what happens when a specific item is left to someone but the
item is not owned by the decedent ("ademption"); what happens when a specific item
is left to someone and the item carries a mortgage or lien ("nonexoneration"); who
qualifies for a class gift, such as a gift to "my children"; and what rules apply when
a beneficiary wishes to forgo the benefits of a gift and have it go to someone else
("disclaimer"). In one case the effort to unify the law meant codifying a highly
recommended drafting practice: requiring a beneficiary to survive for a specified
period, in this case 5 days, in order to receive a transfer. All of these rules will apply
only if a governing document fails to specify what should be done in the given
situation and other evidence is inadequate to resolve the issue.
4. Attention to the complexities of divorce and remarriage
Wisconsin, like other states, has long had a probate rule that provides that a
divorced spouse will be treated as having predeceased the decedent. The bill extends
that rule to nonprobate assets and also applies the rule to relatives of the former
spouse who are not also relatives of the decedent. Thus, for example, it would apply
to a former stepchild but not to children born or adopted during the former marriage.
Under the proposed rule, a person who wants a different result may simply provide
for it in an estate plan made after the divorce; in addition, extrinsic evidence may be
presented to rebut the presumption in the rule.
With respect to remarriage, the bill establishes a presumption that, subject to
contrary evidence, if a person leaves property to a stepchild in the current marriage
and that stepchild predeceases the decedent, the property goes to the stepchild's
descendants. This is the same antilapse rule that applies to the decedent's own
children.
5. Reduction of the complexity of deferred marital property rights
Under Wisconsin's marital property act, each spouse has a one-half interest in
all property that is acquired from income through work or investments. However,
many Wisconsin couples have deferred marital property: income earned (and the
assets acquired therefrom) while the spouses were married but during a period when
the act did not apply, either because one or both spouses lived in a different state or
because the spouses lived in Wisconsin before the act became effective in 1986. At
the death of a spouse, the current probate code includes separate elections for

probate and nonprobate deferred marital property with complex calculations for
each. The bill, which is grounded in the elective share provisions of the UPC,
replaces the current system with a single deferred marital property election that is
simpler to use and that more closely tracks the partnership theory of marriage on
which the marital property act is based.
The people of the state of Wisconsin, represented in senate and assembly, do
enact as follows:
AB720, s. 1 1Section 1. 6.875 (1) (b) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB720,5,32 6.875 (1) (b) "Relative" means a spouse or individual related within the 1st, 2nd
3or 3rd degree of kinship under s. 852.03 (2), 1995 stats.
AB720, s. 2 4Section 2. 48.92 (3) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB720,5,65 48.92 (3) Rights of inheritance by, from and through an adopted child are
6governed by s. 851.51 ss. 854.20 and 854.21.
AB720, s. 3 7Section 3. 146.34 (1) (j) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB720,5,118 146.34 (1) (j) "Relative" means a parent, grandparent, stepparent, brother,
9sister, first cousin, nephew or niece; or uncle or aunt within the 3rd degree of kinship
10as computed under s. 852.03 (2), 1995 stats. This relationship may be by
11consanguinity or direct affinity.
AB720, s. 4 12Section 4. 157.061 (7) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB720,5,1513 157.061 (7) "Family member" means a spouse or an individual related by blood,
14marriage or adoption within the 3rd degree of kinship as computed under s. 852.03
15(2), 1995 stats.
AB720, s. 5 16Section 5. 178.21 (3) (e) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB720,5,1917 178.21 (3) (e) A partner's right in specific partnership property is not subject
18to elective rights under s. 861.02 (1) or 861.03 of a surviving spouse or to allowances
19to a surviving spouse, heirs, or next of kin.
AB720, s. 6
1Section 6. 242.01 (11) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB720,6,52 242.01 (11) "Relative" means an individual related by consanguinity within the
33rd degree of kinship as computed under s. 852.03 (2), 1995 stats., a spouse or an
4individual related to a spouse within the 3rd degree as so computed, and includes an
5individual in an adoptive relationship within the 3rd degree.
AB720, s. 7 6Section 7. 252.15 (1) (eg) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB720,6,107 252.15 (1) (eg) "Relative" means a spouse, parent, grandparent, stepparent,
8brother, sister, first cousin, nephew or niece; or uncle or aunt within the 3rd degree
9of kinship as computed under s. 852.03 (2), 1995 stats. This relationship may be by
10consanguinity or direct affinity.
AB720, s. 8 11Section 8. 615.03 (1) (c) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB720,6,1412 615.03 (1) (c) A natural person who issues such an annuity to a relative by blood
13or marriage within the third 3rd degree of kinship as computed according to s. 852.03
14(2), 1995 stats.
AB720, s. 9 15Section 9. 632.485 of the statutes is repealed.
AB720, s. 10 16Section 10. 632.695 of the statutes is created to read:
AB720,6,18 17632.695 Applicability of general transfers at death provisions. Chapter
18854 applies to transfers at death under life insurance policies and annuities.
AB720, s. 11 19Section 11. 700.11 of the statutes is repealed and recreated to read:
AB720,7,2 20700.11 Interests in "heirs" and the like. (1) If a statute or governing
21instrument, as defined in s. 854.01, specifies that property is to be distributed to, or
22a future interest is to be created in, a designated individual's "heirs", "heirs at law",
23"next of kin", "relatives" or "family" or a term that has a similar meaning, or if a class
24gift in favor of "descendants", "issue" or "heirs of the body" does not specify the

1manner in which the property is to be distributed among the class members, the
2property is distributed according to s. 854.22.
AB720,7,4 3(2) The common law doctrine of worthier title is abolished under s. 854.22 (3).
4Situations in which the doctrine may have applied are governed by s. 854.22 (1).
AB720, s. 12 5Section 12. 700.12 of the statutes is repealed and recreated to read:
AB720,7,8 6700.12 After-born persons included in class gift. With respect to
7membership in a class under a class gift, the status of a person who was born after
8the membership in the class was determined is governed by s. 854.21 (5).
AB720, s. 13 9Section 13. 700.17 (2) (a) of the statutes is amended to read:
AB720,7,1610 700.17 (2) (a) Each of 2 or more joint tenants has an equal interest in the whole
11property for the duration of the tenancy, irrespective of unequal contributions at its
12creation. On the death of one of 2 joint tenants, the survivor becomes the sole owner;
13on the death of one of 3 or more joint tenants, the survivors are joint tenants of the
14entire interest, except that if. If a survivor disclaims under s. 701.27 (2) (b) 1. 854.13
15(2) (b)
, the joint tenancy is severed as of the date of death with respect to the
16disclaimed interest.
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