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My uncle immigrated to Australia in his early years, got Australian citizenship and had a house in China. Can he make a will for me?

Hello.

The other party can make a will and give you the house.

A will refers to a legal act of handling a person's estate or other affairs in a manner prescribed by law within the scope permitted by law before his death, and takes effect when the founder dies.

The so-called will refers to the personal punishment made to the testator's estate or other undertakings within the scope permitted by law before his life, which takes effect when the testator dies. Will * * * has the following characteristics:

Will is a unilateral legal act.

That is, a will is a legal act that can produce expected legal consequences based on the testator's unilateral expression of will.

Two, the testator must have full capacity for civil conduct.

Persons with limited capacity and persons without civil capacity cannot make a will without testamentary capacity.

Third, the establishment of a will cannot represent.

The content of a will must be the true meaning of the testator, which should be made by the testator himself and cannot be represented by others. If it is a testament, it must also be signed by myself.

Four, in an emergency, to use oral form.

But also need more than two witnesses to witness. After the state of emergency is lifted, if the testator can make a will in written or recorded form, the oral will is invalid.

5. A will is an act that takes legal effect when the testator dies.

Because a will is a disposition made by the testator before his death, and it can be changed or revoked before his death, the will must be based on the testator's death.

If the testator is not actually dead, but meets the relevant legal conditions and is declared dead by the people's court upon the application of an interested party, the will will also take legal effect, and the interested party may dispose of the testator's property. If the testator reappears in a short time, the corresponding property can be returned to the testator; If it takes a long time, such as more than two years, and the property cannot be returned, the beneficiary shall help the testator's basic life within the scope of his benefit, but the legal obligor is not subject to this restriction.

I hope I can help you. Thank you. I hope it will be adopted.