Important things to consider when drafting a Will
- A Will must have Witnesses.
- A Will must be written in ink.
- A Will must have a clause of refuting any written or oral will in existence prior to the will at hand.
- A testator must list all of his / her properties.
- A Will must have a date.
- A Will must be signed.
- A Will must state properties, heirs and distribution of properties.
- A Will must state the executor of the estate.
- A Will may state the place of burial of the testator.
- A Will must state the percentage distribution of properties, if the testator has more than one heir.
- A Will must state in detail the property specifics e.g. model of the car, plate number of the car, location of the plot of land, size of the plot of land e.t.c.
- A Will must state all the legal heirs except for the following legal reasons;
1: An Islamic Will
Should not distribute one-third of the property to non-heirs. It should be put into emphasis that if the testator is a Muslim and he/she does not wish to follow the Islamic norms of property distributions in his/her will, a special clause ought to vividly state so.
2: A Will under the custody of the Office of the Administrator- General (RITA)
It has prescribed fees as propounded under The Administrator- General (Powers and Functions) Act, with the following fees;
- The Office of the Administrator-General (RITA) also takes into custody wills prepared outside the office by private Advocates and charges the following fees; for preparation and cross-reference is Tsh. 50,000/=, custody of the will is Tsh. 100,000/= and amendment of the will is Tsh.100,000/=.
-Joint wills are usually prepared by husband and wife and in the course of death of either of them, the will shall still be operative, executed and amended by the surviving spouse.