Estate Planning Attorneys Alpine : Probate & Elder Law Attorneys in Alpine, VA

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Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Alpine, Virginia

Alpine Estate Planning & Probate Attorneys

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Vitt Law Offices, PLC

TEL (434) 971-3025 |  Charlottesville, VA

Mr. Vitt first became interested in estate planning in law school while taking an estate taxation course. As an attorney, he always has found it more rewarding to help people plan, and assist them in ...(more)



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ESTATE PLANNING, PROBATE & ELDER LAW NEWS

» Wills and Trusts With Incorrect Family Information

Here’s a problem that I’ve encountered a couple of times recently: people who intentionally misstate their family situation in their estate planning documents. In both cases, the testator did not list all of his or her children in the section of the Will usually entitled “My Family.” Note that this is different from disinheriting, although that appears to be the purpose behind the exclusion.

Let me give an example:

Testator has four children, Adrian, Betty, Caliope, and David. Testator’s Will says, “I have two children now living, Adrian and Caliope,” and leaves all of testator’s property to “my children who survive me.”

This language raises three problems:

1. Is it effective to disinherit Betty and David? If I represent either of them, I say that the language leaving the property to “my children who survive me” governs, since the testator obviously was incorrect in stating that he had two living children.

2. This language also gives Betty and David a better argument for contesting the Will. Would you say that someone who misstates the number of their children is competent?

3. In some cases, the disinherited children don’t wish to contest the Will. This is the case where the Will was trying to do something the testator wanted to do (cut out two children), but did it incompetently. (The best way to disinherit is to say it specifically.) The issue is that the probate attorney needs to be able to go into court and show the decedent’s family situation to the judge. Next month I will go to court and ask a judge to rule that a decedent had four children, despite the decedent having a Will that says he had only two children. That could create problems.

To expand on this last point, I’m starting to think that heirship should be set forth more explicitly in estate planning documents. Usually I do this roughly, with a section entitled “My Family,” listing spouse and living children. But maybe we should go one step further? I recently had a situation where a decedent died leaving hard-to-pin-down heirs. The decedent was unmarried, and had no children or living parents or siblings. It took quite a bit of time to track down her two heirs (cousins), because the beneficiary/sole heir didn’t really know about the decedent’s family situation. It would have been better to get the heirship information from the decedent during the estate planning process.

» “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 [...]

» Mayer named UBS fixed-income co-chief

»  Crunch Time Tax Guide
Procrastination need not be lethal. Here are ways you can still save on your taxes now and in the future.

» The Perils of Out-of-Date Estate PlansLoading...

Estate planning can be divided into two stages. One is the actual creation of the plan and the other is its regular updating.