After a death, you'll hear lawyers and court officials use one of two words to describe the estate: testate or intestate. Which category applies determines everything—who gets the assets, who's in charge, whether probate drags on for months or years.
Someone dies "testate" when they've left a valid will spelling out asset distribution. The term traces back to Latin—"testatus"—which meant to bear witness or give testimony. Think of the will as final testimony. It's the deceased saying "here's what I want to happen with my stuff" when they can no longer speak for themselves.
Die without a valid will? That's intestate. Now the state writes your estate plan for you, following laws passed by legislators who never met you and don't know what you wanted.
Control. That's what separates these two paths.
Die testate and you're still calling the shots from beyond the grave. Your will names who's in charge (the executor). It lists who gets what. You can leave your book collection to the local library, your fishing boat to your brother-in-law, and your retirement savings to your kids—all spelled out clearly.
Die intestate and you've handed control to the state legislature. They've written a formula—usually spouse and kids first, then parents, siblings, more distant relatives. Sounds reasonable until you realize those formulas can't account for nuance.
Here's a real-world example: Your sister helped care for you during your final illness while your brother ha...