Treasury release list of 14 unclaimed estates in Glasgow that you could inherit if you have these surnames
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It could be your lucky day. The Treasury has revealed its list of unclaimed estates in Glasgow and if you have one of the listed surnames there’s a chance it’s yours.
An unclaimed estate is put in place after a person passes away without an effective will but many are seemingly still intact with no members of family coming forward to claim them. As long as no family claims, the deceased person’s property will become ‘ownerless property’ and remain in possession of the Crown.
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Hide AdUnlike popular belief, this property can still be claimed within a 12-year period from when the Crown possesses the estate. Any relative of the deceased can claim if they believe they are entitled to a share of the property.
For unclaimed estates before 1997, the Treasury will allow claims up to 30 years from the date of the person’s death, subject to no interest being paid on the money that is held - if the claim is received after the 12-year period has ended.
Who is entitled to an unclaimed estate?
If someone dies without leaving a valid or effective will the following relatives are entitled to the estate in the order shown below:
1. Husband, wife or civil partner
2. Children, grandchildren, great grandchildren and so on
3. Mother or father
4. Brothers or sisters who share both the same mother and father, or their children (nieces and nephews)
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Hide Ad5. Half brothers or sisters or their children (nieces and nephews of the half blood or their children). ‘Half ’ means they share only one parent with the deceased
6. Grandparents
7. Uncles and aunts or their children (first cousins or their descendants)
8. Half uncles and aunts or their children (first cousins of the half blood or their children). ‘Half’ means they only share one grandparent with the deceased, not both
Cousins can claim an estate if there is no one above them in the order of relatives.
Surnames of the unclaimed properties in Glasgow
- Burton
- Fraser
- Gibson
- Jenner
- Leipman
- McDonald
- Burton
- Mcloughlin
- Morrissey
- Murray
- Orr
- Parker
- Peacock
- Reilly
Anyone who believes they might be entitled to a share of an unclaimed estate should contact the Treasury on the government website.
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