Luis Carlos de Noronha Cabral da Camara made an unusual distribution of  his money after his death: 70 people listed in a Lisbon phone directory  were contacted out of the blue after his death to be told he had made  them his beneficiaries.  They had been chosen at random from the  directory, in front of two witnesses at a 
  office 13 years before.  It certainly came as a shock to them. In the  first place, people do not, as a rule, make wills in Portugal. In the  second, Portuguese aristocrats are getting thin on the ground, let alone  eccentric ones. In the third - to be chosen by phone directory? No  wonder that some feared they were being scammed. 
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 The homeless brothers who inherited more than 100 million euros
 The homeless brothers who inherited more than 100 million euros

 A pair of penniless down and outs inherited a share of a 4 billion GBP  fortune after a bizarre twist in family fortunes. Brothers Zsolt and  Geza Peladi were so poor they lived in a cave outside Budapest, Hungary,  and sold scrap they found on the street for pennies. Now both of them  and a sister who lives in America inherited their grandmother's massive  fortune after a life of 
poverty.   "We knew our mother came from a wealthy family but she was a difficult  person and had severed ties with them, then later abandoned us and we  lost touch with her and our father until she eventually died," said  Geza, 43.
They learned of their good fortune after homelessness  charity workers in Hungary were contacted by lawyers handling the estate  of the brothers' maternal grandmother who died recently in  Baden-Wurttenberg, Germany. Under German law direct descendents are  automatically entitled to a share of any estate - that would pass from  their dead mother to them. 
(Link | Photo)
 The student who inherited almost a billion euros from an uncle he hadn't seen for a decade
 The student who inherited almost a billion euros from an uncle he hadn't seen for a decade

 Sergey Sudev was left a 950 million euros fortune by an uncle he had not  seen for 10 years. But he must have made a good impression at their  meeting a decade ago, because it prompted the uncle, who lived in  Germany, to write Sudev into his will straight away. The student had no  idea he stood to inherit a fortune and got on with his course in  journalism.Then one day there was a knock at his door in the town of  Komrat - his uncle's agents had tracked him down to pass on the  incredible news. A shocked Sudev is reported to have said to them: "Is  this a joke?" The inheritance means he has become one of the richest men  in Moldova, where the average monthly salary is around 270 euros. 
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 The richest woman in Asia gave away her multi-billion-US-dollar fortune  to a feng shui master in return for a promise of eternal life
  The richest woman in Asia gave away her multi-billion-US-dollar fortune  to a feng shui master in return for a promise of eternal life

 Nina Wang, who died of cancer in 2007 at age 69, signed over her vast fortune to a previously unknown feng shui master Tony 
Chan  as a promise for eternal life. Wang changed her will in 2006 in order  to leave everything to the feng shui master, voiding a previous will  written four years earlier that left the fortune to her family and to  charity. With no children of her own, Wang wrote a new will in 2006, two  years after her ovarian cancer was diagnosed, making 48-year-old Chan her sole beneficiary.
The question is, why would Chan ask Wang to put him in her will if he had ensured her she would live forever, or at least for a very long time? 
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 The waitress who inherited a little fortune from a customer
 The waitress who inherited a little fortune from a customer

 In 1992, Cara Wood was 17 and working at Drin's Colonial Restaurant in  her hometown of Chagrin Falls, about 15 miles east of Cleveland. She was  a good employee – bright, friendly and helpful. One customer, Bill  Cruxton, liked her so much that he always sat in her section. A widower  with no children, he went daily to the restaurant for his meals and some  company, so they became friends.  In addition to being his regular  waitress, she helped him around 
the house  and ran errands for him. Wood became so important to Cruxton that he  rewrote his will, making her the main beneficiary. Cruxton, 82, died of  heart failure in November 1992 and left her half a million dollars. 
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 The Argentine maid who recived $40m after a judicial battle that involved a corpse's robbery
 The Argentine maid who recived $40m after a judicial battle that involved a corpse's robbery

 Eva Paole, a retired Argentine maid, has inherited the whopping sum of  $40 million after a nine-year legal battle. It was a decade ago that  Paole first heard the rumor that she might be the daughter of baron  Rufino Otero, who died in 1983 and had no 
children with  his wife. Until then, Paole always had thought she was the daughter of  her mother, Josefa, and her partner. Her mother took the secret of Eva's  real father to her grave. According to Eva, "money isn't everything"  and what is really important for her is that she has finally discovered  her true identity. DNA tests showed she truly is the daughter of the  powerful landowner who died 25 years ago.
If all of that wasn't enough material for a 
soap  opera, six weeks after Eva began legal proceedings, Otero's tomb was  desecrated and his corpse exchanged for another. To establish Paole's  relation to Otero, authorities used the remains of the land baron's  mother, Justina Porras instead. 
(Link 1 | Link 2 | Photo)
 The teenager who inherited an Island with a buried treasure
 The teenager who inherited an Island with a buried treasure

 Josh wasn't close to his grandfather and in fact, he had met him just a  handful of times in his 17 years. Stubborn and highly traditional,  Samuel disapproved of his daughter Susan's 
marriage  to a man from outside of their religious faith, but he'd always had a  soft spot for his only grandson. Although he hadn't seen his grandson in  years before his death in 2007,  Josh was named the heir to what  remained of his grandfather's estate, including a 36-acre island and  more than 80 acres of farmland. But there was something unexpected in  the will… a detailed list of antique jewellery and loose gems contained  “in the thermos.” There was no indication at all of where this portion  of Josh's inheritance was. But Susan did remember the oblique references  her father had always made of his “treasure island” when she was a  child.
So now the hunt is on, and while finding Samuel's hidden  thermos of precious gems is far from a sure bet, the family is confident  that it will soon turn up somewhere on (or under) the island's 36  acres. 
(Link)
 The Terrier who inherited a $12m fortune
 The Terrier who inherited a $12m fortune

 New York hotelier and real estate 
billionaire  Leona Helmsley (called the Queen of Mean) has left $12m (£5.97m) to her  pet dog, Trouble. The pampered pooch received the largest bequest from  Mrs Helmsley's will while some human members of Mrs Helmsley's family  fared less well, with two of her four grandchildren cut out of the will  entirely.
The money for Trouble's upkeep was left in the hands of her brother, Alvin Rosenthal, who inherited $10m himself. 
(Link 1 | Link 2)
 The man who left part of his inheritance to the woman who would give birth to the most children 10 years after his death
 The man who left part of his inheritance to the woman who would give birth to the most children 10 years after his death

 Though highly successful in law and in his investments, Millar is now  known primarily for his love of jokes and pranks which played on  people's greed and hypocrisy. Millar's greatest and final prank was his  will, which says in part: "This Will is necessarily uncommon and  capricious because I have no dependents or near relations and no duty  rests upon me to leave any property at my death and what I do leave is 
proof of my folly in gathering and retaining more than I required in my lifetime."
The  will was full of playful bequests. But the final bequest of his will  was the largest and strangest. In the will's ninth clause,  Millar's  estate's balance was required to be converted to cash ten years after  his death and given to the woman who gave birth to the most children in  that time. In the event of a tie, the bequest would be divided equally.  The resulting contest became known as the Great Stork 
Derby. 
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 The homeless who fled police while bringing him news of a $6-million inheritance
 The homeless who fled police while bringing him news of a $6-million inheritance

 A homeless man supposed to be living on the streets of Santa Cruz de la  Sierra, Bolivia fled police who were bringing him news of a $6-million  inheritance. Tomas Martinez, 67, apparently thought the police were  about to arrest him for his alcohol and drug habits. The man disappeared  without a trace, causing Bolivian newspapers to speak of him in 2000 as  a "new millionaire paradoxically not knowing his fortune". The  inheritance came to Mr Martinez from his ex-wife, Ines Gajardo Olivares,  who inherited the money herself from 
family members. She evidently did not blame him for leaving her several years ago. 
The (un)lucky man has never been found. 
(Link 1 | Link 2) 
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