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ADMINISTRATION (Lat. administrare, to...

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Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 194 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ADMINISTRATION (
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Lat. administrare, to serve)
  , the performance or management of affairs, a
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term specifically used in law for the administration or disposal of the estate of a deceased person(see WILL OR TESTAMENT) . It is also used generally for " government," and specifically for " the government " or the executive
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ministry, and in such connexions as the administration(administering or tendering) of the sacraments, justice, oaths, medicines, &c . Letters of Administration.—Upon the
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death of a person intestate or leaving a will to which no executors are appointed, or when the executors appointed by the will cannot or will not act, the
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Probate Division of the High Court is obliged to appoint an
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administrator who performs the duties of an executor . This is done by the court granting letters of administration to the person entitled . Grants of administration may be either general or limited . A general grant is made where the deceased has died intestate . The order in which general grants of letters will be made by the court is as follows: (1) The
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husband, or widow, as the case may be; (2) the next of kin; (3) the
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crown; (4) a creditor; (5) a stranger . Since the
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Land Transfer Act 1897, the administrator is the real as well as the
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personal representative of the deceased, and consequently when the estate to be ad-ministered consists wholly or mainly of reality the court will grant administration to the heir to the exclusion of the next of kin . In the absence of any heir or next of kin the crown is entitled to the personality as bona vacantia, and to the reality by escheat . If a creditor claims and obtains a grant he is compelled by the court to enter into a bond with two sureties that he will not prefer his own debt to those of other creditors . The more important cases of grants of
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special letters of ad-ministration are the following: Administration cum testamento annexo, where the deceased has
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left a will but has appointed no executor to it, or the executor appointed has died or refuses to act . In this case the court will make the grant to the person (usually the residuary legatee) with the largest beneficial
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interest in the estate .

Administration de bonis non administratis: this occurs in two cases—(a) where the executor

dies intestate after probate with-out having completely administered the estate; (b) where an administrator dies . In the first case the principle of administration cum testamento is followed, in the second that of general grants in the selection of the person to whom letters are granted . Administration 'durante minore aetate, when the executor or the person entitled to the general grant is under age . Administration durante absentia, when the executor or administrator is out of the jurisdiction for more than a
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year . Administration pendente lite, where there is a dispute as to the person entitled to probate or a general grant of letters the court appoints an administrator till the question has been decided .

End of Article: ADMINISTRATION (Lat. administrare, to serve)
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