Sec. 45a-295. (Formerly Sec. 45-186). Court may annul orders passed under a revoked will. Subsequent settlement procedure.
Sec. 45a-295. (Formerly Sec. 45-186). Court may annul orders passed under
a revoked will. Subsequent settlement procedure. (a) When it appears to any court
of probate, pending proceedings before it for the settlement of the estate of a deceased
person as a testate estate, that the will under which such proceedings were commenced
and have been continued had been revoked in accordance with the provisions of subsection (b) of section 45a-257, the court shall have power to revoke, annul and set aside
any order or decree proving or approving the will so revoked and any other order or
decree made and passed by such court in the settlement of the estate under such will.
(b) The court may thereafter proceed with the settlement of the estate under a subsequent will if there is one or, if there is no subsequent will, may grant administration on
the estate of such deceased person and proceed with the settlement of the estate as an
intestate estate upon such notice to all parties in interest as the court orders.
(1949 Rev., S. 6974; P.A. 79-569, S. 2; P.A. 80-476, S. 251.)
History: P.A. 79-569 referred to revocation of will in accordance with Sec. 45-162(b) rather than revocation "by the
testator by a subsequent will or by the marriage of the testator or by the birth or adoption of a child"; P.A. 80-476 divided
section into Subsecs. and made minor wording changes, substituting "the" for "such"; Sec. 45-186 transferred to Sec. 45a-295 in 1991.
See note to Sec. 45a-128.
Annotations to former section 45-186:
Word "revoked" is not to be construed as limited to a complete revocation of former will. 152 C. 206.
Where plaintiffs made motion to dismiss defendant's application for probate and appealed to superior court from probate
court's dismissal of motion, held appeal must be erased for lack of jurisdiction. 23 CS 101.