Estate Planning Attorneys Bryantown : Probate & Elder Law Attorneys in Bryantown, MD

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Attorneys

 

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Bryantown, Maryland

Bryantown Estate Planning & Probate Attorneys

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Law Office of David A. Lucas, LLC

TEL (301) (301) 215-7766 |  Bethesda, MD

As an attorney in private practice in Bethesda, Maryland, David A. Lucas provides extensive estate planning, asset protection, and business planning services to individuals and businesses. David’s ma...(more)

SinclairProsser Law, LLC

TEL (301) 970-8080 |  Bowie, MD

TEL (410) 573-4818 |  Millersville, MD

TEL (410) 573-4818 |  Annapolis, MD

Colleen Sinclair Prosser concentrates her practice on estate planning law and heads the trust and estate ...(more)



Other Bryantown, Maryland Estate Planning & Probate Law Firms (Basic Listings)
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ESTATE PLANNING, PROBATE & ELDER LAW NEWS

»  Follow The Golden Dragon
What's China going to do with its stash of more than $600 billion in foreign reserves? Buy gold, of course.

» Should I Get The Auto Warranty?
This is a great time of year to buy a car. Salespeople are desperate for Christmas money, dealers want to close out the year with a bang, and the lot managers need to make room for new models. I’m going shopping later for a car with a friend and I’d like to get [...]

» Intentional Interference with an Inheritance, and the Ellis Case

Besides an action to contest a Will, a frustrated beneficiary may attempt to proceed with a tort known as "intentional interference with an inheritance." In some cases, this may be the ONLY way in which the potential beneficiary can proceed.

In the Nemeth case (425 N.E.2d 1187), for instance, the decedent's stepdaughter (not an heir of the decedent) filed an intentional interference with an inheritance action against her step-sister because a successful Will contest would have done her no good.

A number of cases have followed, trying to explain the limits and ramifications of the tort. A recent case involves the estate of a woman named Grace Ellis (found here as a PDF). The case was brought by the Shriners Hospital for Children, beneficiaries under a previous Will, against a man named James G. Bauman (who was named as sole beneficiary and executor under the Will that was admitted to probate). Ms. Ellis evidently died in 2003, but the Shriners took no action to contest anything until 2006. Maybe their itty-bitty cars were in the shop all that time? Or (more likely), perhaps the Shriners had no idea that they were named as beneficiaries in a previous Will.

Anyway, the Shriners file their suit, making the same sorts of allegations as you might see in a Will contest (lack of capacity and undue influence). But, of course, they can't file a Will contest, because Will contests must be filed within six months after the Will in question was admitted to probate.

Can you use the intentional interference with inheritance tort to get around the six month period, since it isn't a Will contest? No, says the court.

» “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 [...]

» Nabokov's Laura and the Disobedient Executor

I've talked before -- most recently, here -- about executors who don't obey the wishes of decedents, and refuse to burn their works. Vladimir Nabokov's case (which involves this scenario) has been in the news lately, in a two-part series in Slate entitled The Fate of Nabokov's Laura:

Part 1

Part 2