Succession Act 1965 and Related Legislation: A Commentary
By (Author) Brian Spierin
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Professional
28th November 2024
6th edition
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Hardback
728
Width 156mm, Height 248mm
Written by one of the leading experts in the field, the aim of this book is to make it as accessible as possible in assisting solicitors, barristers and judges alike. The Succession Act has long acted as a weathervane of social change in Ireland, taking into account changes such as the status of illegitimacy and the introduction of divorce. Each section of the 1965 Act (as amended) is set out in full, and followed by a detailed narrative commentary which explains the sections and examines how they have been interpreted by the courts. Up-to-date appendices contain the relevant Probate Office and Superior Court forms. Covers the following important cases: - Naylor v Maher [2018] IECA 32 - K v K [2018] IEHC 615 - GS v MB [2022] IEHC 65 This title is included in Bloomsbury Professional's Irish Wills and Probate online service.
The authors, eminently qualified as they are to write this commentary, will rightly enjoy the gratitude of practitioners and students alike I have no doubt this commentary will enjoy a huge success - it deserves no less -- Mr Justice Nicholas J Kearns, Foreword to Third Edition * Succession Act 1965 and Related Legislation: A Commentary *
Brian Spierin is a leading expert in Ireland on the Law of Succession and Probate. He practised at the bar since 1985 and was called to the inner bar in 1999. Brian retired from practice in July 2022. He has been involved with wills for nearly forty years, as a member of staff of the High Court Probate Office, a law lecturer, a published author and as a junior and senior counsel. He is the author of The Succession Act and Related legislation: A Commentary, 5th Edition, which won the Dublin Solicitors Bar Association Book of the Year in 2018 and Wills, Irish Precedents and Drafting, 3rd Edition, which was also nominated for Practical Book of the Year by the Dublin Solicitors Bar Association.