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Estate Planning Estate
planning requires professional judgment that can be obtained
only by years of training, experience and study. You need a
practicing attorney to avoid the countless pitfalls and to
advise you on the course best suited for your situation. At
Wallis Law Firm, P.A., we advise families on how to arrange their
assets and choose documents to achieve their goals
efficiently and effectively.
To begin your Estate Plan,
download our questionnaire
here. This will help you identify your questions and the
issues you should address immediately.
PLANNING
Estate planning is the process of arranging your finances
to meet your goals. Estate planning begins with a discussion
of your goals and a review of your assets.
You need to consider each asset and its unique
characteristics. Do you know that many assets could and
should bypass probate if you die? Have you saved enough for
your children's college and your retirement? Is your money
in the right investment to be available for emergencies?
Your goals, and therefore your plans will change with your
circumstances. You should reexamine your plans every year or
two to make sure they remain current.
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Your children deserve the
protection of legal planning.
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An estate plan can help ensure that your loved ones are
properly provided for if you become sick or die.
It can ensure that you retire when you want, with the
funds you need to be comfortable.
It can make sure that your health care is managed in the
way you choose.
DRAFTING
The law office of Wallis Law Firm, P.A. has extensive
experience and expertise in drafting wills and other estate
documents. We can assist you with the preparation of:
Wills
Living Trusts
Durable Powers of Attorney
Health Care Powers of Attorney
Living Wills
Other documents that may help you achieve your goals
You should have a will that reflects your wishes for your
property. It should be general and include possible future
assets and heirs, so that it does not need to be rewritten
often. It should be properly witnessed and self proving so
that it can be admitted to probate without a search for the
witnesses.
If you have young children, you should have a trust to
assure that the funds are available for their support, even
if you are not able to care for them yourself. In your will,
you should appoint a guardian that you trust to raise them
the way you would.
ESTATE DOCUMENTS YOU MAY WANT TO KNOW
MORE ABOUT
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Plan for all of your dependents.
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1. WILL
A will distributes property you own when you die. If you
have not written a will, your property will pass to the
heirs that are set by state law. A will should be drafted in
general terms to control whatever assets you own at your
death and to cover whatever beneficiaries are living at your
death, so you do not have to revise it frequently. We do
witnessed, self-proving wills that can be presented for
probate without the testimony of family, friends and
witnesses.
Your will is the best place to name who will
physically take care of minor children, should you die
before your children are grown and on their own (legally at
age 18). You should pick one or more persons you would trust
with your children, and equally important, people who are
willing to take on the tremendous responsibility of taking
care of your children. Whatever you do, contact these people
and get their permission before you name them in your will.
2. LIVING TRUST
A living trust has a settlor (you), one or more trustees
who manage the assets in the trust according to the terms
you set out, and one or more beneficiaries who receive the
assets in the trust according to the terms you set out. It
is in effect during your life as well as after your death. A
living trust is used to manage assets for your benefit if
you are disabled, or for the benefit of your dependents
(such as children) if you are not available to handle these
affairs yourself. Assets in a trust are not subject to your
will and do not go through probate at your death.
3. GENERAL, DURABLE POWER OF ATTORNEY FOR BUSINESS
Everyone should have a power of attorney that appoints a
trusted person as their attorney-in-fact to handle business
for them whenever they cannot manage themselves. When you
execute a general, durable power of attorney, you authorize
your attorney-in-fact to carry on any business matter which
you yourself could do, if you are unable to handle the
business yourself for any reason.
4. HEALTH CARE POWER OF ATTORNEY
With recent changes to federal law, you must appoint someone
to make health care decisions if you are ever unable to
decide for yourself. By executing a health care power of
attorney, you select your agent, and one or more alternates,
who are authorized to consent to or refuse any health care
that may be considered for you. You may indicate your
general wishes for health care and may make this power
limited or broad.
5. LIVING WILL
A living will allows you to indicate to your family and
health care providers that if you are terminally and
incurably ill or in a permanent vegetative state you do not
wish extraordinary life support measures or artificial
hydration and nutrition (tube feeding). This may be in
addition to or instead of a health care power of attorney. A
Living Will expresses a decision; a Health Care Power of
Attorney delegates decision making to someone who
understands your wishes.
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