not2cleverRed
Obvious Observer
Is there a requirement in TX that children be (at least partial) beneficiaries of life insurance policies and other assets like IRAS?I disagree with the previoius responses. As I understand the facts, the family line here is grandmother, boy's father (who predeceased grandma), aunt and uncle (thus the father, aunt and uncle are all siblings) and finally the boy -- the grandchild. Under Texas intestate succession law, grandma's estate would be divided equally among all her children if they were all alive when she died. But as the boy's father was dead when grandma died, his share goes to his son. In other words, if I have the facts right the son gets one third of the estate, and has just as much claim to the house as his aunt and uncle do.
I agree on the intestate succession information, but OP seems to think it's unfair that the "boy" didn't get the whole house, since it was purchased with money received by grandma as the sole beneficiary of the boy's dad's life insurance, etc. Once grandma got that money, it was hers. That is what OP seems to be focusing on: the assets grandma was a beneficiary of, and the house purchased using some/all of those assets. Dad's estate is a non-issue at this point.
Grandma could have created a trust for the boy - that included the house. She could have had a will. She apparently had neither. And it is unclear what other assets she had. Boy's 1/3 could be 1/3 of a house (or its equity) - or it could be 1/3 of a lot more, depending on the size of the estate.
Whatever boy does, he should invest in therapy, because dad hated his ex-wife so much that he'd rather not provide for his own child.
Note: I didn't think twice about changing my primary beneficiary from my spouse to my minor child when the divorce was finalized.