Current with legislation from 2024 Fiscal and Special Sessions.
Section 28-49-101 - Possession by personal representative(a) A personal representative shall have the right to, and shall, take possession of all of the personal property of the estate of the decedent, subject to the rights of dower and curtesy and statutory allowances of the surviving spouse or minor children, if any.(b)(1) Real property shall be an asset in the hands of the personal representative when so directed by the will, if any, or when the court finds that the real property should be sold, mortgaged, leased, or exchanged for any purpose enumerated in § 28-51-103, irrespective of whether any personal property of the estate, other than money, is available for such a purpose.(2) When real property has become an asset in the hands of the personal representative as provided in this section or when and as long as the court finds it necessary for the preservation of the property, for protecting the rights and interests of persons having interests therein, or for the benefit of the estate, the personal representative may collect rents and earnings from the property, pay taxes and special assessments thereon, make necessary repairs thereon, maintain the property in tenantable condition, preserve it against deterioration, protect it by insurance, and maintain or defend an action for the possession of the property, or to determine or protect the title until the real property is sold, mortgaged, leased, exchanged, or is delivered to the distributees thereof, or until the estate is settled.(c) Unless sold, mortgaged, leased, or exchanged by the personal representative pursuant to other provisions of the Probate Code, the real property shall not be distributable by the personal representative.Acts 1949, No. 140, § 94; 1961, No. 424, § 1; A.S.A. 1947, § 62-2401.