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An incidence common to the two types of wills

Attitude of courts to wills

Burden on executors whenever the validity of a Will is challenged

Distinction between the rules relating to formal validity of a will and the rules of law pertaining to the determination of the effectiveness and consequences of a will

Duty of the courts with regard to wills

Effect of a joint tenancy clause in a will

Effect of a testamentary disposition of the Igiogbe of a Bini man

Effect of customary law on the disposition of properties by a will

Elements of a valid will

How a will should be read

Instances when instructions given for a will are admissible

Meaning of a Will

Nature of a will

Need for the provisions of the law to be complied with for a will to be valid

On what part of the will the witnesses are required to subscribe

Position of the law where there is consistency of intention between the instructions and the final will and the intention is conveyed by clear and unambiguous words

Presumption of due and valid execution of a will

Role of the Court in ascertaining the validity of a Will

The age of testamentary capacity in Ghana

The condition for the validity of a devise or bequest in a will

The nature of the presumption of regularity which enures in favour of a Will

The number of witnesses required to attest to a will

The position of the law on the form of a will

The principle that no one, other than the testator, can modify a Will

The principle that the testator must be of sound mind at the time of making the will

The rule that a will is the product of testator’s intent and wishes

The rule that where there is proof of a testator’s signature, it is presumed that he knew the contents and effect of the will

What is a will?

What must be proved by the propounder of a will

What the principle that a will is ambulatory entails

When a property devised under a will vests in the beneficiary

When a will has legal effect

Whether a bequest to an heir is not valid unless the heirs consent to it under Mohammedan law

Whether a handwritten will must be written in the handwriting of the testator himself

Whether a Mohammedan can make a will

Whether a personal representative to whom a testator devises all his property takes the properties absolutely

Whether a property held on behalf of a group of persons can be the subject-matter of a testamentary disposition by an individual person in his own right

Whether a property registered in a child's name can be devised in a will

Whether a testator can devise a jointly owned property to another person

Whether a testator can make separate devises to the same person in different clauses in the same will

Whether a will made by an illiterate without an illiterate jurat is valid

Whether a will which fails to meet the requirements of Act 360 will be honoured as a valid samansiw

Whether an executor under a testamentary disposition in which he himself was a beneficiary can challenge the validity of the will he was administering without attempting to renounce probate

Whether in proving the validity of a will, it is enough to prove that it was prepared by a legal practitioner

Whether inaccurate references to beneficiaries invalidates bequests

Whether the attesting witnesses need to know that the document is a will

Whether the attesting witnesses to a will must testify where the will is produced for probate

Whether the court can expunge passages from the will of a testator

Whether the court can interfere with the will of a deceased

Whether the court can rewrite a will

Whether the fact that a Ghanaian made a will in English Language makes the will an English will

Whether the personal law of the testator applies to the construction of bequests and devises in a will

Whether the right of a married person to make a will depends on the system of his marriage

Whether the will of a testator must be registered; where it must be registered

Whether wills can be executed in duplicates

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