§ 1659. License when deceased under contract to convey; court may grant; effect of deed
(a) When a decedent had contracted to convey real estate and the party contracted with has performed or is ready to perform the conditions of the contract, on motion for that purpose, the Probate Division of the Superior Court may grant license to the executor or administrator of the estate to convey the lands according to the contract, including any modifications to it. If the executor or administrator is the transferee under the contract, the judge of the court shall execute the deed. The deed executed by the executor, administrator, judge, or special administrator or master appointed by the court shall be valid to convey the real estate authorized to be conveyed under the contract.
(b) The Probate Division of the Superior Court shall not grant a license to convey the real estate of a deceased person under contract if it appears to the court after hearing that the assets in the hands of the executor or administrator will be reduced by the conveyance in an amount that prevents a creditor from receiving the whole debt and the value of the real estate to be sold is materially greater than the contract price. (Amended 2009, No. 154 (Adj. Sess.), § 238a, eff. Feb. 1, 2011; 2017, No. 195 (Adj. Sess.), § 9.)
Structure Vermont Statutes
Title 14 - Decedents' Estates and Fiduciary Relations
Chapter 75 - License to Sell and Convey Real and Personal Property
§ 1611. Court may order personal and real estate sold
§ 1614. Interested persons may prevent sale; bond
§ 1651. License to sell estate; procedure
§ 1652. Deed of executor or administrator
§ 1654. Disposal of proceeds of beneficial sale
§ 1656. Estate sold to pay debts and legacies in other states
§ 1657. Real estate sold to pay legacy
§ 1658. Death, resignation, or removal of fiduciary; new license
§ 1659. License when deceased under contract to convey; court may grant; effect of deed
§ 1661. Real estate held in trust; license to convey to beneficiary
§ 1662. Sale of encumbered property of deceased; disposition of surplus