Tuesday, April 26, 2011

SHOULD YOU DRAFT YOUR WILL ONLINE?

Online Wills?

A client asked me whether she should go on-line and draft her own Will. She is very computer-savvy and assumed that she could figure out the requisites of a Will and do it herself.

My response was quick, honest and direct.

A Will is a unique legal document because the person who writes it, the testator, will not be around to explain it. Further there are legal requisites to a valid Will. The Will must be executed (signed and witnessed) properly or it is not valid. If it is executed or prepared improperly, the impropriety will not be discovered until it is too late. I told my client that we frequently see Wills prepared with the assistance of an attorney that are incomplete, inaccurate, invalid or otherwise problematical. There is a necessary ritual that must be followed when the Will is signed. It is not as easy as it seems to write a proper Will which can with-stand a challenge in the future.

The process looks like this: All assets, debts and income are reviewed. All heirs and beneficiaries are listed. Non-probate assets and transfer-on-death (TOD) assets are considered. Medicare and Veteran implications are looked at as well as present and future tax ramifications. Other documents such as a Durable Power of Attorney, a Medical Durable Power of Attorney and a Living Will Declaration are drafted. All documents are reviewed with the client. Any earlier Will is properly revoked. Then the new Will is signed in accordance with the law in the state where it is executed. Each page of the Will is initialed. The witnesses to the Will sign a sworn affidavit which will prove the Will in the future. Attorney notes are preserved. The original documents are stored in a safe. The clients file is placed on the calendar for a review (free of charge) in three years.

Call Jeremy Howe to discuss Will questions or for more information on your estate planning and probate concerns.

------------------------------------------
The Law Offices of Jeremy W. Howe, LTD. are ElderLaw attorneys in Rhode Island who specialize in Wills and Trusts, Estate Planning, Guardianship, Probate, and Veterans Aid and Attendance Benefits.

They also are Newport Rhode Island Divorce Lawyers, Attorneys, Mediators, and Arbitrators providing services for Family Law issues such as Divorce, Child Custody and Visitation, Support, and Military Family Law. 

Call them today at 401-841-5700 or visit them on the web at http://www.CounselFirst.com.

No comments:

Post a Comment