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18 March 2021

Further Amendments To The BVI'S Trust And Estate Legislation 2021

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O'Neal Webster

Contributor

Since 1989, O’Neal Webster has provided high-quality legal counsel to domestic and international clients with complex matters in commercial, insolvency, and probate litigation; corporate, banking, finance, and investment fund; trusts and estates; intellectual property; real estate; and admiralty from its offices in the British Virgin Islands, London, and New York.
O'Neal Webster is pleased to advise that the Property (Miscellaneous) Provisions Act, 2021 and the Administration of Small Estates (Amendment) Act, 2021 have been passed by the BVI legislature and...
British Virgin Islands Family and Matrimonial
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O'Neal Webster is pleased to advise that the Property (Miscellaneous) Provisions Act, 2021 and the Administration of Small Estates (Amendment) Act, 2021 have been passed by the BVI legislature and these new statutes are expected to come into force shortly.

In addition to other ground-breaking changes to its trust and succession laws, two new statutes, the Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 2021 and the Administration of Small Estates (Amendment) Act, 2021 make a number of more minor changes to BVI law.

The Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 2021

The new Property Miscellaneous Provisions Act has, consistently with the spirit of the Status of Children Act, 2014, abolished (to the extent that it actually still exists) an ancient English rule of public policy which created impediments where dispositions in favour of those born out of wedlock were intended.   The archaic English rule was one to the effect that provisions in trust instruments and wills which expressly provide for relatives born out of wedlock are void as being contrary to public policy.  The rule clearly had no place in the twenty-first century and had to go.

The Administration of Small Estates (Amendment) Act, 2021

The Administration of Small Estates (Amendment) Act implements a long overdue increase in the qualifying value for the Administration of Small Estates Act.  The latter sets out in it a very simple procedure for applying for a grant of probate or letters of administration in the BVI where the value of the estate is low.  The threshold set out in the statute, which had not been amended since it came into force in colonial times, has been increased from US$240 to US$25,000, but the statute is only now applicable if the deceased died domiciled in the BVI.

The reforms were made at the recommendation of the Trust and Succession Law Review Committee of the BVI Branch of the Society of Trust and Estate Practitioners (STEP) which is chaired by O'Neal Webster Partner Chris McKenzie and was formerly chaired by O'Neal Webster Managing Partner Vanessa King who still serves on the Committee.  Vanessa is also chair of the BVI Branch of STEP and was recently elected as chair of STEP's Caribbean and Latin America Regional Committee.

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ARTICLE
18 March 2021

Further Amendments To The BVI'S Trust And Estate Legislation 2021

British Virgin Islands Family and Matrimonial

Contributor

Since 1989, O’Neal Webster has provided high-quality legal counsel to domestic and international clients with complex matters in commercial, insolvency, and probate litigation; corporate, banking, finance, and investment fund; trusts and estates; intellectual property; real estate; and admiralty from its offices in the British Virgin Islands, London, and New York.
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