@spitRR , sorry to hear you are SOL. None of this is fun .
Extended side of my family had a farm corporation, involved 200 prime acres outside London, rental property, contracted land . Mom ,pop and three children , two kids leave farm for careers , 3 rd has career that includes managing the farm. Mom / Pop pass away and two kids find out the corporation has a survivor clause , everything is in kid 3s name. Lawyer advised walk away .
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As much as that hurts it beats spending a fortune fighting a losing cause.
Accepting the inevitable is easier if there was no intent to cut the siblings out with nothing. In the above case there may have been non farm assets to be distributed. Did kid #3 keep the farm corporation from going belly up and therefore deserves the lion's share?
In other cases there is intent from the get go when a dependent moves in and bullies a new will, grabbing everything. Mom refuses to accept that the helpful child would take advantage of the situation and the family is destroyed.
My F-I-L died young but left the family home and three rental properties to my M-I-L for income.
He should have left the three rental properties, one to each of his kids, with the stipulation that the net rental income would go to my M-I-L. With the three properties being a cooperative concept, no one wanted to take care of the places and M-I-L ended up selling them off.
My B-I-L bullied my M-I-L into willing him control of the estate, letting him live in the family home as long as he wanted. Only when he could no longer keep the place up would the house be sold and assets shared. That could have been 20 years. Twenty years of hell for the executor and no inheritance for the other heirs.
The reason was my B-I-L couldn't buy a place of his own with his share and he was so in debt creditors would have wiped him out anyway. They couldn't touch anything as long as his share was tied up in the estate.
Fortunately M-I-L saw the light and changed her will and the fight ensued, eating up a major chunk of the already diminished estate.
Thought: When nearing the time you don't want any more aggravation in life give away your estate to whoever you want. They in turn post bonds to cover your living expenses. You die and the bonds die. All the "Who gets what" is dealt with when you are there to fight it out without courts and lawyers eating away at the estate value.
Maybe if there is dead wood in the family tree the process should start earlier so the dead wood can work towards being able to meet the qualifications.