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How To Challenge A Will In Spain

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A will can be declared null for various reasons. Credit: PeopleImages

When a loved one dies, the last thing the family expects is a legal battle. Yet our experience at our law firm has taught us that, unfortunately, these conflicts are surprisingly common.  Especially when the “will” differs significantly from previous versions. Or when the circumstances around its signing raise doubts.

In Spain, contesting a will is possible, but it requires solid evidence and a clear legal basis. One of the most frequent grounds (besides the manipulation of the testatrix) to challenge a will is the diminished capacity of the testator. To make a valid will, the testator must understand the nature of the act and the consequences of the dispositions. If someone is suffering from a serious mental disorder, dementia, or severe cognitive impairment at the time of signing, the will may be considered invalid.

Evidence needed to challenge a will

Spanish law presumes that a will is valid and that the testator had capacity. Therefore, the burden of proof lies with the person challenging the document. It is not enough to suspect that the testator was unwell. The challenge must be supported by objective evidence. Typically, this includes medical records, expert psychiatric reports, that can attest to the mental capacity of the deceased at the time of its signing.

The role of the Notary Public in Spain and its limits

In Spain, wills are normally signed before a notary. The notary certifies that the testator appeared to have capacity to make the will. However, this certification is not absolute. If evidence shows the testator lacked capacity (for example, medical reports of dementia), the presumption of validity can be challenged in court. So, while the notary’s role is important, it does not prevent a will from being contested if there is strong proof of incapacity.

Practical example: two wills declared invalid

In a recent case handled by our law firm, we were able to demonstrate that two wills executed by the deceased were made at a time when they lacked any capacity to make a valid testament. In fact, shortly after signing them, the person was judicially declared incapable. The court ruled in our favour, and those wills were revoked, so the inheritance will be carried out based on the will that was truly the last one executed by the deceased when they were fully capable.

If you suspect a will granted by a loved one was done under undue influence, or when the deceased had lost his/her capacity to grant a will fully understanding the consequences, etc. reach out to us, today. At White & Baos Lawyers, we are experts in contesting wills. We will review your case and offer you expert and tailored legal advice.

You may be interested in the following services and articles:

New Court Success: Contesting a Will in Spain. European Regulation 650/2012 and Habitual Residence. International Inheritance. Expert legal advice..

New court success. Challenging a Spanish will in court. Legitimacy rights. Application of Spanish law to foreign heirs. Expert legal advice.

New Court Success. Legacy claim. Inheritance disputes in Spain. Real estate assets.

Carlos Baos (Lawyer)

White & Baos.

Tel: +34 966 426 185

E-mail: info@white-baos.com

White & Baos 2026 – All Rights Reserved.

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Living Solo: Spain’s Village With Only One Resident

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Legally, the municipality continues to exist, retaining its name. Photo Credit: CC Wikipedia

In the heart of rural Spain, Illán de Vacas, a small village located in the province of Toledo stands as one of the clearest examples of the country’s deepening demographic imbalance. With just one registered resident, it is officially recognised as the least populated inhabited municipality in Spain, highlighting the long-term decline affecting large areas of the interior.

Despite its extreme isolation, the settlement remains legally populated. While neighbouring hamlets have long since lost their final inhabitants and disappeared from official records, this location continues to exist administratively due to the decision of a single person to remain.

A settlement frozen in time

The area is made up of a small number of traditional stone houses, most of them empty, with shuttered windows and streets devoid of daily activity. There are no shops, bars, schools or medical facilities, and public infrastructure has largely fallen into disuse.

Silence dominates the surroundings, broken mainly by wind, wildlife and the occasional passing vehicle. Electricity and water remain connected, but maintenance is minimal and reliant on provincial authorities rather than local management. There is no local economy and no communal life.

Despite appearances, the locality has not been formally abandoned. As long as one person remains registered, it continues to exist on Spain’s municipal map, even if daily life bears little resemblance to that of a functioning community.

The decision to stay

The sole resident is known to have strong personal ties to the area and has chosen permanence over relocation, despite the lack of services and social interaction. While many rural Spaniards have moved to cities in search of employment, healthcare and education, this case reflects the opposite decision: remaining rooted, even at the cost of solitude.

Basic necessities require regular travel to nearby towns by car. There is no public transport, and winter weather can make access difficult for days at a time, reinforcing the isolation faced by the only inhabitant.

An extreme example of a national trend

A municipality with just one resident is not an isolated curiosity but the most extreme expression of a broader national pattern. Large parts of inland Spain, often described as the España vaciada (Empty Spain), have experienced decades of population decline driven by urban migration, ageing populations and the disappearance of rural employment.

Demographic data cited by Spanish media shows that hundreds of municipalities now have fewer than 100 residents, with many at risk of disappearing entirely within a generation. Areas of Castilla-La Mancha are among the most affected by this long-term shift.

Limited impact of recovery policies

Despite repeated political commitments to revitalise rural Spain, settlements at this level of depopulation have seen little benefit from repopulation initiatives. Programmes promoting rural housing, tax incentives or remote working have struggled to reach locations with no services or employment base.

Experts note that once depopulation reaches this stage, attracting new residents becomes exceptionally difficult without sustained institutional support and guaranteed access to essential services.

Administrative survival, social disappearance

Legally, the municipality continues to exist, retaining its name, boundaries and administrative status. Socially, however, it functions as a near-ghost settlement. Without neighbours, schools or shared public life, the social fabric that defines a village has effectively vanished.

Specialists warn that recovery at this point is highly unlikely unless repopulation is backed by long-term employment opportunities and structural investment.

A warning rather than a curiosity

For many readers, the story resonates less as an oddity than as a warning. The image of a single resident maintaining the last thread of life in an otherwise empty settlement highlights the consequences of decades of demographic neglect.

Its future depends entirely on the continued presence of that one individual. When that changes, it is likely to join the growing list of officially uninhabited places across Spain, a quiet reminder of a rural country that is still there, but only just.

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Magnetic Highway Found In Arp 220 Galaxy

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ALMA’s detailed map of Arp 220 reveals organised magnetic fields guiding powerful molecular outflows from the galaxy’s two merging cores. Credit : almaobservatory.org

Astronomers have just mapped something extraordinary inside a distant galaxy system known as Arp 220 – a vast, organised magnetic structure that appears to guide matter through space like a cosmic motorway.

The galaxy lies around 250 million light-years from Earth. While that sounds impossibly distant, Arp 220 offers scientists something incredibly valuable: a glimpse into how massive galaxies behaved more than ten billion years ago, when the Universe was far more chaotic than it is today.

Using the powerful ALMA telescope array in Chile, researchers have created the most detailed magnetic map ever produced of this system. What they found suggests magnetic forces are not just background actors in galactic evolution — they may actively shape and accelerate enormous winds of gas moving at staggering speeds.

If you stop reading here, here’s the core point: magnetic fields in Arp 220 appear to be steering matter out of the galaxy at up to 1.8 million kilometres per hour, challenging long-held assumptions about how galactic winds are powered.

What makes Arp 220 so special?

Arp 220 is not a calm, ordinary galaxy. It is the result of two spiral galaxies colliding and merging. That collision has triggered an intense burst of star formation so powerful that the system shines brighter than hundreds of galaxies like our own Milky Way.

But much of that activity is hidden behind thick clouds of dust. That’s why astronomers rely on instruments like ALMA, which can see in wavelengths that penetrate those dusty regions.

Think of Arp 220 as a time capsule. Galaxies in the early Universe often grew through violent mergers like this. By studying Arp 220, scientists are effectively looking back at conditions similar to those that shaped the cosmos billions of years ago.

How the ‘Magnetic Highway’ was detected

The breakthrough came from studying polarisation — the way dust grains and carbon monoxide molecules align under magnetic influence.

When researchers mapped those alignments, they saw something striking: in one of the galaxy’s cores, the magnetic field forms a structured, almost vertical pathway. Along this route, matter is flowing outward at extraordinary speed.

Rather than being passive, the magnetic field seems to act as a guide — a channel directing the gas away from the galactic centre. That’s where the idea of a “magnetic highway” comes from.

In the western nucleus of Arp 220, the magnetic structure aligns closely with a bipolar outflow, suggesting it plays a direct role in launching or shaping that flow.

In the eastern nucleus, the picture looks different. There, astronomers observed a spiral magnetic pattern embedded within a dense rotating disk. A polarised dust bridge even connects the two galactic centres, hinting that magnetism is influencing the merger itself.

Why this changes the conversation about galactic winds

Until now, many scientists believed that extreme galactic outflows were driven mainly by explosive star formation or supermassive black hole activity.

This new magnetic map complicates that story.

The magnetic fields measured in Arp 220 are hundreds – even thousands – of times stronger than those typically observed in the Milky Way. At that strength, they are not minor players. They can influence how gas moves, how stars form, and how galaxies lose material over time.

If similar magnetic structures were common in the early Universe, they may have shaped how galaxies evolved on a large scale.

That’s a significant shift in perspective.

What happens next in this line of research

The team now hopes to apply the same mapping techniques to other merging or dust-rich galaxies.

If similar magnetic “highways” are found elsewhere, it would suggest that magnetism is a fundamental engine of galactic evolution, not just a supporting factor.

Arp 220 may be the first clear example – but it is unlikely to be the last.

Why invisible forces matter

Magnetic fields are invisible, but they are far from insignificant.

In space, where gravity and radiation often dominate the conversation, magnetism has sometimes been treated as secondary. These findings challenge that assumption.

What we may be seeing in Arp 220 is a reminder that galaxies are shaped not just by explosive energy, but by structured, organised forces operating quietly in the background.

What this means for our understanding of the universe

For readers following space science, this discovery reinforces something important: the Universe is more complex than we often imagine.

Arp 220 shows that invisible magnetic structures can organise chaos on a galactic scale. And if those structures were common in the past, they may have played a central role in building the cosmic landscape we see today.

It’s not just about one distant galaxy. It’s about rewriting part of the story of how galaxies grow, evolve and transform over billions of years.

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Man Trapped To His Waist 10 Hours In Mud Slide

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Firefighters struggle to free man. Credit: Diputacion de Malaga

A 53-year-old man went through a dramatic and arduous rescue after becoming trapped in mud up to his waist in a remote area of Gaucin, in the Ronda mountains near Casares, on Saturday, February 14.

The alert reached the 112 Emergency Service of Andalucia around 3pm, when a passerby reported that a man was stuck in deep mud up to his waist along a narrow path in the Las Buitreras area, a rugged section of the Guadiaro River canyon between Gaucin station and the Los Alemanes bridge, roughly 2 kilometres from Colmenar station.

Hiker half buried by mud slide

The victim had been walking along the trail when a slope collapse buried his lower body in thick mud, leading to the emergency call and activating the emergency response. Coordinating a complex operation, authorities deployed firefighters from the Malaga Provincial Fire Consortium (CPB) units in Ronda and Algatocin, later reinforced by personnel from Campillos, along with Guardia Civil officers, local police, healthcare teams, and civil protection volunteers.

Nuestras dotaciones #Ronda y #Algatocín intervinieron este sábado, de 15.30h a la 01.30h para rescatar a un varón atrapado en el barro de cintura para abajo, en la zona de Las Buitreras, #Gaucín
Es porteado a la ambulancia para su traslado al hospital#CPBMálaga @diputacionMLG pic.twitter.com/jMCIS4KY26

— CPB Málaga (@cpbmalaga) February 15, 2026

Access to the site proved extremely difficult, and the rescue took over 10 hours, from approximately 3.30pm until 1.30am on Sunday. As teams excavated, extra mudslides occurred, bringing in more earth, stones, and branches that threatened further to entrap and even bury the man. To stabilise the site and prevent more collapses, firefighters used a technique of installing boards and supports to shore up the excavation walls.

10 hours to free in freezing conditions

The Gaucin Town Hall assisted by supplying materials for the shoring work. Once the man was carefully freed, avoiding serious injury from the debris, he started to show signs of hypothermia. Emergency medical personnel carried him to an ambulance, which transported him to the Hospital de la Serranía in Ronda for evaluation and treatment.

The incident goes to show the hazards of walking isolated, weather-impacted natural paths in the region, as well as the skill and persistence required of emergency responders in such demanding conditions. No other injuries were reported, and the coordinated effort made sure of the man’s safe extraction after a prolonged ordeal. Like Dr Foster going to Gloucester, it is doubted he will go there again!

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