- A. A designation of the grantee beneficiary may be revoked at any time prior to the death of the record owner, by executing, acknowledging and recording in the office of the county clerk in the county where the real estate is located an instrument revoking the designation. The signature, consent or agreement of or notice to the grantee beneficiary or beneficiaries to the revocation is not required.
- B. A designation of the grantee beneficiary may be changed at any time prior to the death of the record owner, by executing, acknowledging and recording a subsequent transfer-on-death deed in accordance with the Nontestamentary Transfer of Property Act. The signature, consent or agreement of or notice to the grantee beneficiary or beneficiaries is not required. A subsequent transfer-on-death beneficiary designation revokes all prior designations of grantee beneficiary or beneficiaries by the record owner for the interest in real estate.
- C. A transfer-on-death deed executed, acknowledged and recorded in accordance with the Nontestamentary Transfer of Property Act may not be revoked by the provisions of a will.
- D. A transfer-on-death deed executed, acknowledged and recorded in accordance with the Nontestamentary Transfer of Property Act may be disclaimed in whole or in part or with reference to specific parts by the grantee beneficiary or beneficiaries. The disclaimer must occur within nine (9) months after the death of the landowner. The disclaimer shall be filed with the office of the county clerk in which the transfer-on-death deed was recorded. If a grantee beneficiary exerts dominion over the real estate within the nine-month period, the disclaimer is waived. Dominion may be evidenced by acts including, but not limited to, possession or the execution of any conveyance, assignment, contract, mortgage, security pledge, executory contract for sale, option to purchase, lease, license, easement or right-of-way. A guardian, executor, administrator or other personal representative of a minor or legally incompetent beneficiary may execute and file a disclaimer on behalf of the beneficiary within the time and in the manner in which the beneficiary could disclaim, if the guardian, executor, administrator or other personal representative deems it in the best interests of and not detrimental to the best interests of the beneficiary.
Added by Laws 2008, HB 2639, c. 78, § 4, eff. November 1, 2008.