New Mexico Statutes

§ 45-2-803 — Effect of homicide on intestate succession, wills, trusts,

New Mexico § 45-2-803
JurisdictionNew Mexico
Ch. 45Uniform Probate Code
Art. 2Intestate Succession and Wills

This text of New Mexico § 45-2-803 (Effect of homicide on intestate succession, wills, trusts,) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
N.M. Stat. Ann. § 45-2-803 (2026).

Text

joint assets, life insurance and beneficiary designations. A. As used in this section:

(1)"disposition or appointment of property" includes a transfer of an item of property or any other benefit to a beneficiary designated in a governing instrument; and (2) "revocable", with respect to a disposition, appointment, provision or nomination, means one under which the decedent, at the time of or immediately before death, was alone empowered, by law or under the governing instrument, to cancel the designation in favor of the killer, whether or not the decedent was then empowered to designate the decedent's own self in place of the decedent's killer and the decedent then had capacity to exercise the power. B. An individual who feloniously and intentionally kills the decedent forfeits all benefit

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Legislative History

1953 Comp., § 32A-2-803, enacted by Laws 1975, ch. 257, § 2-803; repealed

Nearby Sections

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Bluebook (online)
New Mexico § 45-2-803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/nm/45/45-2-803.