Estate Planning Attorneys Cairo : Probate & Elder Law Attorneys in Cairo, IA

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Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Cairo, Iowa

Cairo Estate Planning & Probate Attorneys

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Duffy Law Office

TEL (563) 445-7400 |  Davenport, IA

Dennis Duffy combines an extensive background in business with a wide range of legal experience to provide his clients with a uniquely practical perspective. An attorney since 1989, he now devotes ...(more)



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ESTATE PLANNING, PROBATE & ELDER LAW NEWS

» Convert Customers With a Perfect Landing Page
Remember these three steps if you want to convert your pay-per-click ads into sales.

» UBS shakes up board, governance policies

» Bill Murray's Prenup -- with Extra Top 5 List!

Bill Murray and his wife are getting divorced.

Bill Murray and his wife signed a prenup before their 1997.

If you are familiar with prenups, you know what comes next: Bill Murray's wife is challenging the validity of the prenup.

Here are the details, with a copy of said prenup.

Five Bill Murray films I like a lot (note that I haven't seen movies like Caddyshack and Stripes):

1. Rushmore

2. Tootsie

3. Ed Wood

4. Wild Things

5. Charlie's Angels

» Tangible Personal Property and edivvyup.com

One of the biggest little problems in probate is how to deal with tangible personal property -- furniture, clothing, furnishings, etc. left by the decedent. Most Wills leave such property "in shares of substantially equal value" to decedents -- that language recognizes that you can't divide tangible personal property in equal shares the way you divide cash equally. But it still fails to address typical problems with this type of property:

1. What if two individuals want the same piece of property?

2. Is equality based on actual value? If so, what about sentimental value?

The problem is even worse if you have an intestacy with unequal shares. I have one of these right now -- three siblings of the decedent (each getting 1/3rd), with the last share being split among 7 children.

There's also a question of how, as a practical matter, to facilitate the distribution. Some people use the hat -- if there are 3 kids, then all 3 names are placed in a hat, and the order in which they come out is the order for the children to pick items they want. If it's Tommy, then Billy, then Alice...

Tommy picks first (choosing one item)
Billy picks second (choosing one item)
Alice picks third (choosing one item)
Tommy picks fourth (choosing one item)
etc. etc. etc.

You can add more certainty (and more complexity) to this process by having all tangible personal property appraised, and then "charging" the fair market value of property taken by each individual against that individual's share of the estate. That addresses what happens if Alice chooses all of mom's (expensive) jewelry and the other two choose only lamps and other less valuable items.

Another idea comes from this new website: edivvyup.com. Basically, the site allows you to create an auction, open only to the estate's beneficiaries. Beneficiaries get points, which they can use to bid on items. Whoever bids the most points on an item gets it.

» “Child Reduction Act” Trailer
The year is 2016. The President signs the Child Reduction Act. Families with more than one child under the age of 18, must pay a multiple child tax. Families unable to afford the tax, must send their extra children to the CHILD CONSERVATION CAMPS. The Pearce family has two teenage children - and can only [...]