North Dakota Code § 30.1-18-05

(3 -705) Duty of personal representative - Information to heirs and
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
devisees.
Not later than thirty days after appointment, every personal representative, except any 
special administrator, shall give information of the appointment to the heirs and devisees, 
including, if there has been no formal testacy proceeding and if the personal representative was 
appointed on the assumption that the decedent died intestate, the devisees in any will 
mentioned in the application for appointment of a personal representative. The information must 
be delivered or sent by ordinary mail to each of the heirs and devisees whose address is 
reasonably available to the personal representative. The duty does not extend to require 
information to persons who have been adjudicated in a prior formal testacy proceeding to have 
no interest in the estate. The information must include the name and address of the personal 
representative, indicate that it is being sent to persons who have or may have some interest in 
the estate being administered, indicate whether bond has been filed, and describe the court 
where papers relating to the estate are on file. The information must state that the estate is 
being administered by the personal representative under this title without supervision by the 
court, but that recipients are entitled to information regarding the administration from the 
personal representative and may petition the court in any matter relating to the estate, including 
distribution of assets and expenses of administration. The personal representative's failure to 
give this information is a breach of duty to the persons concerned but does not affect the validity 
of the appointment, the personal representative's powers, or other duties. A personal 
representative may inform other persons of the appointment by delivery or ordinary first -class 
mail.

‹ Prev All North Dakota sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.