Disinherit - meaning and definition. What is Disinherit
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What (who) is Disinherit - definition

PRACTICE OF PASSING ON PROPERTY UPON THE DEATH OF INDIVIDUALS
Heir; Heirs; Inheritance (law); Disinheritance; Heirs-general; Disinherit; Inheritence; Hereditary right; Inheritance law; Inheritrix; Inherited wealth; Hereditary rights; Patrimonial capitalism; Dynastic wealth; Succession to property; Inheriting; Inheritances; Ancestral property transfer; Bequests in Islam; Inheritance in Islam; Double portion
  • Inheritance by amount and distribution received and action taken with inheritances in Great Britain between 2008 and 2010
  • From [[William Hogarth]]'s ''[[A Rake's Progress]]''. "The Young Heir Takes Possession Of The Miser's Effects".

disinherit         
¦ verb (disinherits, disinheriting, disinherited) dispossess of or bar from an inheritance.
Derivatives
disinheritance noun
Origin
ME (superseding earlier disherit): from dis- + inherit in the obs. sense 'make someone an heir'.
disinherit         
v. to intentionally take actions to guarantee that a person who would normally inherit upon a party's death (wife, child or closest relative) would get nothing. Usually this is done by a provision in a will or codicil (amendment) to a will which states that a specific person is not to take anything ("my son, Robert Hands, shall receive nothing," "no descendant of my hated brother shall take anything on account of my death."). It is not enough to merely ignore or not mention a child in a will since he/she may become a "pretermitted heir" (a child apparently forgotten). A spouse can be disinherited only to the extent that the state law allows. A writer of a will can also disinherit anyone who challenges the validity of the will in what is called an "in terrorem" clause, which might say "I leave anyone who challenges this will or any part of it one dollar." See also: codicil descent descent and distribution heir in terrorem clause pretermitted heir will
Disinherit         
·vt To deprive of heritage; to Dispossess.
II. Disinherit ·vt To cut off from an inheritance or from hereditary succession; to prevent, as an heir, from coming into possession of any property or right, which, by law or custom, would devolve on him in the course of descent.

Wikipedia

Inheritance

Inheritance is the practice of receiving private property, titles, debts, entitlements, privileges, rights, and obligations upon the death of an individual. The rules of inheritance differ among societies and have changed over time. Officially bequeathing private property and/or debts can be performed by a testator via will, as attested by a notary or by other lawful means.

Examples of use of Disinherit
1. No one can disinherit any of his heirs or increase or decrease their shares.
2. No one can disinherit an heir, and no one can give an heir more than the share God has given him or her.
3. This, after all, was simply the latest embarrassment to endorse his father‘s decision, 13 years ago, to disinherit him from control of the 100million Blenheim estate.
4. Cravinhos said the father had threatened to disinherit Richtofen from his estate, worth a reported $'54,000, if she did not end their relationship.
5. The following day, Leo Amery talked over the debacle with King George VI, who was "very nice about it". Next, he went to his lawyer to disinherit his son.