Nevada Code § 136.240

Petition for probate; same requirement of proof as other wills; testimony of witnesses; rebuttable presumption concerning certain wills; prima facie showing that will was not revoked; order
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1. The petition for the probate of a lost
or destroyed will must include a copy of the will, or if no copy is available
state, or be accompanied by a written statement of, the testamentary words, or
the substance thereof.
2. If offered for probate, a lost or
destroyed will must be proved in the same manner as other wills are proved
under this chapter.
3. In addition, no will may be proved as a
lost or destroyed will unless its provisions are clearly and distinctly proved
by two or more credible witnesses and it is:
(a) Proved to have been in legal existence at the
death of the person whose will it is claimed to be and has not otherwise been
revoked or destroyed without the knowledge, consent or ratification of such
person; or
(b) Shown to have been fraudulently destroyed in
the lifetime of that person.
4. The testimony of each witness must be
reduced to writing, signed by the witness and filed, and is admissible in
evidence in any contest of the will if the witness has died or permanently
moved from the State.
5. Notwithstanding any provision of this
section to the contrary:
(a) The production of a persons lost or
destroyed will, whose primary beneficiary is a nontestamentary trust
established by the person and in existence at his or her death, creates a
rebuttable presumption that the will had not been revoked.
(b) The production of a copy of a persons lost
or destroyed will, whose provisions are clearly and distinctly proved by two or
more credible witnesses, creates a rebuttable presumption that the will had not
been revoked.
(c) A person may overcome the presumption set
forth in paragraph (a) or (b) only by proving by a preponderance of the
evidence that the person whose will it is claimed to be destroyed the will with
the intent to revoke the will before his or her death. In the absence of such
evidence:
(1) The lost or destroyed will must be
admitted to probate; and
(2) The court shall accept a copy of such
a will as sufficient proof of the terms thereof without requiring further
evidence.
(d) For a lost or destroyed will to which the
presumption set forth in paragraph (a) or (b) does not apply, if the proponent
of a lost or destroyed will makes a prima facie showing that it was more likely
than not left unrevoked by the person whose will it is claimed to be before his
or her death, then the will must be admitted to probate in absence of an objection.
If such prima facie showing has been made, the court shall accept a copy of
such a will as sufficient proof of the terms thereof without requiring further
evidence in the absence of any objection.
6. If the will is established, its
provisions must be set forth specifically in the order admitting it to probate,
or a copy of the will must be attached to the order.

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