If, within 180 days after a petition for bankruptcy is filed, the debtor “acquires or becomes entitled to acquire ... by bequest, devise, or inheritance” an interest in property that would have been included in the bankrupt estate had the interest been acquired before the petition had been filed, the after-acquired interest becomes the property of the bankrupt estate. 11 U.S.C. § 541(a)(5)(A). One of the debtors in our ease was named as a legatee in a will. Her testator died during the 180-day period. The will was not admitted to probate, however, until 16 days after the 180-day period had expired. The debtor disclaimed the legacy, and if the disclaimer was effective the legacy went to her son, the appellant. The bankruptcy and district courts held that the disclaimer was not effective, because the legacy had become the property of the bankrupt estate by virtue of the statutory provision that we have quoted.
The question whether the provision is activated by the will’s becoming operative, on the death of the testator, or not until the will is admitted to probate, has not been addressed in a reported appellate ease, although
In re Lybrook,
The validity of a will is not established until the will is admitted to probate; that is what it means to admit a will to probate. Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 110½ ¶ 4-13;
Schaefer v. Mazer,
A different interpretation of the after-acquired provision would gut the provision. It often takes 180 days or more to probate a will, and a legatee who wanted to delay the probate in order to keep a legacy out of a bankrupt’s estate would often be able to do so.
Affirmed.
