Foreign Wills
The procedure for admitting to probate a Will executed in Illinois, by an Illinois resident, is pretty simple. A wrinkle is added if the Will wasn't executed in Illinois. A typical scenario is where a person executes a Will in another state, and then moves to (and dies in) Illinois. Can the "foreign Will" be admitted to probate in Illinois?
The answer is "yes," in the following situations:
1. The Will has already been admitted to probate in another state,
2. The Will, although executed outside Illinois, was executed in accordance with...
a. Illinois law;
b. The law of the state in which it was executed; or
c. The law of the state in which the testator lived when the Will was executed.
The rules about admitting a Will already admitted to probate in another state are found in Section 7-3 of the Probate Act. The big question here is whether the original Will can be obtained from the other state.
Section 7-4 of the Probate Act addresses the admission of a not-yet-probated Will executed outside of Illinois. Proof is easiest when the Will already complies with the execution requirements in Illinois, which are (from Section 4-3 of the Probate Act) as follows:
Every will shall be in writing, signed by the testator or by some person in his presence and by his direction and attested in the presence of the testator by 2 or more credible witnesses.
