Estate Planning Attorneys Antioch : Probate & Elder Law Attorneys in Antioch, CA

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Attorneys

 

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Antioch, California

Antioch Estate Planning & Probate Attorneys

  • Home »
  • California » Antioch Estate Planning Attorneys, Probate Attorneys & Elder Law Attorneys »

Results for: estate planning attorneys Antioch. Browse listings to find an Elder Law or Probate Lawyer in Antioch, CA.




The Law Offices of William A. Massarweh

TEL (925) 937-9866 |  Walnut Creek, CA

Mr. Massarweh received his B.A. degree in Management from St. Mary's College of California and his Juris Doctorate from the John F. Kennedy School of Law. Mr. Massarweh is a member in good standin...(more)



Other Antioch, California Estate Planning & Probate Law Firms (Basic Listings)

Law Offices Of Joel A. Harris, Antioch, CA  (925) 757-4605





ESTATE PLANNING, PROBATE & ELDER LAW NEWS

» Facebook and "My Own Last Wishes"

I've been spending a lot of time on Facebook lately, as my classmates and I reconnect and make plans for the (gulp) 20th reunion of the Marshall (Michigan) High School Class of 1988, this summer or fall.

As you may know, Facebook allows you to add applications to your profile page -- for photos, music, something called SuperPoke (don't ask), etc. Anyway, one of the applications is something called "My Own Last Wishes." Here's how it is described by its creators:

If you died tomorrow, would your family or friends know what your own last wishes would be? Would they know if you wanted to be an organ donor or what to do with your beloved pet? Would they know whether you wanted to be cremated and your ashes scattered on your favorite hiking trail or if you wanted to be buried dressed as Elvis, along with your prized bowling trophy, and accompanied to your gravesite to the strains of “Blue Hawaii”?

‘My Own Last Wishes” lets you give your family and friends a roadmap for your final journey and more.

I know that "My Own Last Wishes" is really just like any other application -- it's intended to waste a bit of time on the internet. But you can probably see the problem with this, can't you?

-Very few Americans have a Will. Presumably (hopefully) they understand that they need one, and that "My Own Last Wishes" is not a substitute for one. This doesn't create a legally-binding document.

-I also question whether "My Own Last Wishes" can even do what it says it's trying to do: "give your family and friends a roadmap for your final journey and more." How does your family know that you are on Facebook? Or know how to access your account? Or know that Facebook is where you listed your last wishes? And will they find all of this out soon enough after your death to cremate you, or bury you like Elvis?

» Report: Ousted Bear co-prez laughs last

» The Agnes Wright Case and Loans vs. Gifts

In re. Estate of Agnes H. Wright is an appellate case that deals with whether an individual's attorneys can be disqualified. The case is available here as a pdf. I'm less interested in that issue than in the issue that prompted the litigation in the first place. This is an undue influence case, pitting sibling vs. sibling. At issue is a trust amendment signed by Mrs. Wright. The trust amendment says that she loaned her son Peter $1.8 million to purchase a vacation home in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. The amendment recites other information about the transaction, but the key is that the amendment characterizes the transaction as a loan. Peter, however, says that the transaction was a gift, and that the trust amendment was executed only because Peter's sister Linda exerted undue influence against their mother.

If I had any advice to take from the case, it would be this: resolve issues of loan vs. gift before death, by a writing signed by all parties. The problem in the above case is that the amendment is signed only by Mrs. Wright. If you want to loan money to a child, have the child agree to the terms of the loan BEFORE you hand over the money. Similarly, if you want to gift money to a child, think seriously about making equal gifts to all children OR having all children acknowledge that the gift IS a gift (not a loan).

»  Rethinking Rebalancing
Advisers preach portfolio rebalancing as though it's investment gospel. But in practice, such preaching can be costly.

» Bear Bails Out Bernanke
Thank you, Bernanke? Why not?