Contact your brother by mail requesting the document citing the Act below, or preferrably engage a solicitor to obtain the Will for you. If you believe you have an entitlement that was not distributed to you, act with haste through the Supreme Court if your brother does not provide you with your benefits under the Will, or by way of a family provision claim. If this is the case, then i suggest engaging a solicitor familiar with wills and Estates.
A good source of information is at
http://www.legalanswers.sl.nsw.gov.au/guides/law_handbook/pdf/Ch43_wills_estates_funerals.pdf
Refer to Section 54 of the Succession Act NSW (
http://www5.austlii.edu.au/au/legis/nsw/consol_act/sa2006138/s54.html)
Persons entitled to inspect will of deceased person
54 Persons entitled to inspect will of deceased person
A person who has possession or control of a
will of a
deceased person must allow any one or more of the following persons to inspect or be given copies of the
will (at their own expense):
(a) any person named or referred to in the
will, whether as a beneficiary or not,
(b) any person named or referred to in an earlier
will as a beneficiary of the
deceased person,
(c) the surviving spouse, de facto partner (whether of the same or the opposite sex) or issue of the
deceased person,
(d) a parent or guardian of the
deceased person,
(e) any person who would be entitled to a share of the estate of the
deceased person if the
deceased person had died
intestate,
(f) any parent or guardian of a
minor referred to in the
will or who would be entitled to a share of the estate of the testator if the testator had died
intestate,
(g) any person (including a creditor) who has or may have a claim at law or in equity against the estate of the
deceased person,
(h) any person committed with the management of the
deceased person’s estate under the
NSW Trustee and Guardian Act 2009 immediately before the death of the
deceased person,
(i) any attorney under an enduring power of attorney made by the
deceased person,
(j) any person belonging to a class of persons prescribed by the regulations.
Note : “De facto partner” is defined in section 21C of the
Interpretation Act 1987 .
A person who has possession or control of a
will of a
deceased person must produce it in a
court if the
court requires the person to do so.