43 CFR §30.250
Verified against eCFR.gov as of June 20, 2026View official text on eCFR.gov ↗
If, after issuance of a decision or other probate order, it appears that the decision or other probate order contains non-substantive errors, the judge may issue a correction order to correct them. Errors are non-substantive if they are merely typographical, clerical, or their correction would not change the distribution of a decedent's property.
- (a)A judge may issue a correction order for the purpose of correcting non-substantive errors on the judge's own motion. A request for correction order may also be filed by BIA or an interested party at any time.
- (b)Copies of the correction order will be sent to BIA and all interested parties.
- (c)The correction order is not subject to appeal to the Board.