Estate Planning Attorneys Salt Lake City : Probate & Elder Law Attorneys in Salt Lake City, UT

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Attorneys

 

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Salt Lake City, Utah

Salt Lake City Estate Planning & Probate Attorneys

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Results for: estate planning attorneys Salt Lake City. Browse listings to find an Elder Law or Probate Lawyer in Salt Lake City, UT.




Jones Waldo

TEL (435) 200-0085 |  Park City, UT

TEL (435) 628-1627 |  St. George, UT

TEL (801) 534-7434 |  Salt Lake City, UT

Randall “Randy” Holmgren’s practice focuses exclusively on estate planning, asset-protection planning, and business succession planning. 

Estate planning includes protections aimed a...(more)



Other Salt Lake City, Utah Estate Planning & Probate Law Firms (Basic Listings)

Attorneys' Estate & Planning Group, Llc, Salt Lake City, UT  (801) 532-3555


Bateman, Goodwin & Gardner, Salt Lake City, UT  (801) 424-3451


Bruce W. Shand, Attorney At Law, Salt Lake City, UT  (801) 424-2766


Suitter Axland, Salt Lake City, UT  (801) 532-7300





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» Her Fearful Symmetry, the Victorians, and Decapitation Provisions

The holiday break gave me a chance to finish Audrey Niffenegger's Her Fearful Symmetry, which I mentioned in my last post. There are a few references to probate and estate planning in the novel, but this is my favorite -- it's a quote given by one of the main characters (Robert) while he gives a tour of London's Highgate Cemetery (which plays a major role in the book).

"Before modern medical technology, people had a difficult time determining when someone was really dead. You might think that death would be pretty blatant, but there were a number of famous cases in which a dead body sat up and went on living, and many Victorians got the jim-jams just thinking about the possibility of being buried alive.

Being a practical people, they attempted to find solutions to the problem. The Victorians invented a system of bells with strings attached that went through the ground and into the coffin, so if you woke up underground you could pull on your bell till someone came to dig you up. There's no record of anyone being saved by one of these devices. People made all sorts of odd stipulations in their wills, such as asking to be decapitated as insurance against an undesired revival."

A Will with a decapitation provision? Excellent!

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