Minnesota Estate Planning Attorneys, MN Probate & Elder Law

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Attorneys

 

ESTATE PLANNING ATTORNEYS: MINNESOTA

Minnesota Probate & Estate Planning Attorneys


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ESTATE PLANNING, PROBATE & ELDER LAW NEWS

» Loans And The Credit Crunch
I’m sure that most of you have been following the credit crunch news. Yesterday the Fed once again lowered rates, but not to the expectations of most of Wall Street. The current credit crunch in my opinion will make the 80’s farm savings and loans crisis look innocent. Bail outs of large [...]

» Scivantage, Aite and CCH Examiner

» Mount Vernon's checkered past

When George Washington passed away on December 14, 1799, 316 slaves lived at Mount Vernon. via Christian Science Monitor

» What I Learned About DNA Testing

I recently had a case that involved DNA testing. My client asked me to help her prove that she was the child of a recently-deceased man (who never married my client's mother). After a lot of fits and starts, we were successful. A few things I learned during the process:

1. In probate proceedings involving an out-of-wedlock child, you need to rely upon Sec. 2-2 of the Illinois Probate Act: "If a decedent has acknowledged paternity of a child born out of wedlock or if during his lifetime or after his death a decedent has been adjudged to be the father of a child born out of wedlock, that person is heir of his father...."

2. It's important to do your detective work. I was able to locate DNA of the decedent by contacting various hospitals, one of which had retained a tissue sample for the decedent from about 20 years prior to his death.

3. Exhuming a body for DNA testing is VERY expensive, in most cases prohibitively expensive. I was given a conservative quote of $15,000. Testing of existent samples is much cheaper.

4. DNA testing results can show whether the decedent is excluded as a possible father and, if not, the probability that the decedent is the father. This can be expressed two ways: as a percentage (like, "there is a 99.8% chance that decedent is person X's father"), and via what's called a "combined paternity index." The combined paternity index is just the inverse of the percentage -- a 99.8% probability that decedent is person X's father means a combined paternity index of 500 (99.8 = 100-[100/500]).

5. 99.8% (or a combined paternity index of 500 or more) is needed to prove parentage under the Illinois Parentage Act of 1984 (see 750 ILCS 45/11(f)).

» Major firms wade into Fed lending pool