Estate Planning Attorneys Bentley : Probate & Elder Law Attorneys in Bentley, KS

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Attorneys

 

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Bentley, Kansas

Bentley Estate Planning & Probate Attorneys

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Parman & Easterday, LLP

TEL (405) 843-6100 |  Oklahoma City, OK

TEL (913) 385-9400 |  Overland Park, KS

TEL (918) 877-2676 |  Tulsa, OK

After helping his own family deal with a lengthy probate and the IRS following his father’s untimely death in a farm accident, Larry made a decision to help families create effective estate ...(more)



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ESTATE PLANNING, PROBATE & ELDER LAW NEWS

» Small Estate Affidavits and Claims

In Illinois, you can avoid a probate if the decedent owned less than $100,000 in probate assets (that is, assets in his or her own name), and owned no Illinois real estate, at the time of death.

You can do so by presenting a small estate affidavit to the people or entities holding the decedent's assets: banks, insurance companies, IRA custodians, etc. The affidavit sets forth the facts -- that the decedent died (attaching a death certificate), that the decedent had or didn't have a Will (attaching a copy of the Will, if the decedent had one), etc. You also list the decedent's probate assets, and tell who should receive them in what percentages. The people or entities holding the decedent's assets should then distribute them as provided in the affidavit, thereby avoiding probate.

There's a small estate affidavit form in the Illinois Probate Act, but the form has a problem. Here's the relevant part:

7. (a) All of the decedent's funeral expenses have been paid, or (b) The amount of the decedent's unpaid funeral expenses and the name and post office address of each person entitled thereto are as follows:

Name and post office address Amount

(Strike either 7(a) or 7(b)).

8. There is no known unpaid claimant or contested claim against the decedent, except as stated in paragraph 7.

The issue is, what do you do in the typical small estate situation, where there are some assets and also some bills? Do those bills rise to the level of "known unpaid claimant" or "contested claim"? Can you in good faith sign this document under penalties of perjury, including paragraph 8, if you know of a potential claim? Local attorney Cary Lind has a nice discussion here (note that this is an old article -- hence the reference to a $50,000 amount rather than $100,000).

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