Estate Planning Attorneys Berlinville : Probate & Elder Law Attorneys in Berlinville, OH

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Attorneys

 

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Berlinville, Ohio

Berlinville Estate Planning & Probate Attorneys

  • Home »
  • Ohio » Berlinville Estate Planning Attorneys, Probate Attorneys & Elder Law Attorneys »

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




John F. Hall Law Firm

TEL (419) 332-3800 |  Fremont, OH

TEL (800) 635-1355 |  Perrysburg, OH



Other Berlinville, Ohio Estate Planning & Probate Law Firms (Basic Listings)
No other estate planning & probate law firm listings found.



ESTATE PLANNING, PROBATE & ELDER LAW NEWS

» Ga. animal rescue group opening sanctuary

After a year of trying to find the right buyer for Zion Farms, a 310-acre equestrian guest estate in northwestern Floyd County, its owners feel like they have found the right fit - one that continues the farm's ...

» BoNY Mellon CEO grapples with ?09 budget

» AIG deal a positive, analysts say

» What the new administration will mean for investors

» How Much Information Should the Executor Give?

It's always interesting when I'm facing the same situation in two different cases but from opposite perspectives. That's where I find myself with respect to the following issue:

beneficiary (child of X) has questions about the actions taken by executor (also child of X) before X's death, as an agent under X's power of attorney

The question is, to account or not to account? By which I mean, does the executor take the time to prepare an accounting of his or her actions as agent for the beneficiary? In Illinois, such an accounting is not required -- in order to obtain it, the beneficiary would have to file a citation action. But my preference, as an attorney trained in alternative dispute resolution, is to try to resolve court battles before they start. So, what's the harm in providing such an accounting, if it can actually allay the beneficiary's fears?

In my opinion there IS no harm, unless you are convinced that...

1. the beneficiary intends to start a court battle anyway; or

2. the beneficiary has acted unreasonably at other times, and you don't want to reward such behavior.

I guess these two points are related -- the executor has to make a cost/benefit analysis about whether it's worthwhile to provide the requested information. That means the beneficiary should strive to create an atmosphere in which there's a clear benefit offered to the executor for doing what is requested, and a clear detriment to NOT doing what's requested.