Call Us Today 931-250-8585

Blog

“STAIRWAY TO HEAVEN” OR “AVE MARIA”?

Posted by Nina Whitehurst | Oct 25, 2019 | 0 Comments

A comprehensive estate plan can contain your wishes with as much detail as you want, including instructions for your funeral or memorial service. Make sure your family has a chance to remember and celebrate your life instead of placing the burden of arranging final plans—like what song will be playing at your funeral—on your already grieving loved ones.

DO YOU REALLY WANT A ONE-SIZE-FITS-ALL WILL?

Posted by Nina Whitehurst | Oct 24, 2019 | 0 Comments

You’re a unique individual with your own wishes, hopes, and dreams. Should a will that works for a single, 20-something be the same one used for a well-invested grandparent of 12? You’ve worked hard to create the life you have—make sure you trust your planning to an experienced estate planning attorney and not a fill-in-the-blank, cookie-cutter document generator (you know you’ve heard of them) with a final product resembling a Mad Lib game.

WHO GETS YOUR STAMP COLLECTION?

Posted by Nina Whitehurst | Oct 23, 2019 | 0 Comments

Make sure your valuables, mementos, and family heirlooms are handed down to the right person (or organization) who will really appreciate them. Failing to memorialize your wishes in a comprehensive estate plan with a will and/or trust results in intestate succession—the state’s best guess at what you would have wanted to be done with your things.

Estate Planning Awareness Week: The Importance to You and Your Family of Having an Estate Plan

Posted by Nina Whitehurst | Oct 21, 2019 | 0 Comments

In 2008, Congress recognized the need for the public to understand the importance and benefits of estate planning by passing House Resolution 1499, which designated the third week of October as National Estate Planning Awareness Week. Nevertheless, according to a 2019 survey carried out by Caring.com, 57% of adults in the United States have not prepared any estate planning documents such as a will or trust despite the fact that 76% viewed them as important. Many of the respondents said this was due to procrastination, but many others mistakenly believed that it was not necessary because they did not have many assets.

Arizona's Beneficiary Deed (Transfer on Death Deed)

Posted by Nina Whitehurst | Oct 10, 2019 | 57 Comments

An Arizona beneficiary deed is a nonprobate device to transfer residential real property to a named beneficiary upon the owner's death. Like a will, no consideration is required and the beneficiary’s acceptance is not required. Capacity to contract is required. Beneficiary deeds are revocable by recording a revocation, recording an absolute conveyance, or recording a subsequent beneficiary deed.

Common Estate Planning Myths

Posted by Nina Whitehurst | Oct 04, 2019 | 0 Comments

Estate planning can be a very difficult process. While it’s not brain surgery, making the decision to move forward with the planning requires us to face the fact that we will not live forever. This thought can stop many people right in their tracks. Others talk themselves out of seeing a qualified attorney to put together an estate plan based on some of the following common myths:

California's Transfer on Death Deed

Posted by Nina Whitehurst | Sep 26, 2019 | 13 Comments

A nonprobate device to transfer residential real property to a named beneficiary upon the owner’s death. Like a will, no consideration is required and the beneficiary’s acceptance is not required. Capacity to contract is required. TODs are revocable by recording a revocation, recording an absolute conveyance, or recording a subsequent TOD deed.

How Often Should You Review Your Estate Plan?

Posted by Nina Whitehurst | Sep 09, 2019 | 0 Comments

How frequently you should review your estate plan depends on how old you are and whether there has been a significant change in your circumstances. If you are over age 60 and you haven't updated your estate plan in many decades, it's almost certain that you need to update your documents. After that, you should review your plan every three years or so. But if you're younger, you don't need to do so nearly as often.

Keep an Open Mind

Posted by Nina Whitehurst | Aug 29, 2019 | 0 Comments

I have lost count of the number of times I have met with potential clients who are convinced that they need this or that document or amendment or whatnot, but they at least have open minds, and by the end of the meeting they realize that what they actually need is completely different, and far superior to what they had in mind.

Getting a Fee Quote Over the Phone

Posted by Nina Whitehurst | Aug 28, 2019 | 0 Comments

It doesn't happen very often, fortunately, but every once in a while I get a call from an individual wanting me to prepare a particular document that he or she specifies by name. The only concern the caller has is how much it is going to cost. The caller is resistant to answering questions. That is like calling a doctor and asking him or her to write out a prescription for a certain pharmaceutical but refusing to provide your medical history and symptoms and refusing to allow a physical examination. Most doctors (the good ones anyway) will send you packing. You see, doctors don't sell drugs (the good ones anyway); they sell diagnoses and advice. And most doctors tailor that advice to your particular condition.

Take These Three Steps When Your Child Turns 18

Posted by Nina Whitehurst | Jun 06, 2019 | 0 Comments

If your child has reached the teenage years, you may already feel as though you are losing control of her life. This is legally true once your child reaches the age of 18 because then the state considers your child to be an adult with the legal right to govern his or her own life.

You Think There Is Enough Time but Is There?

Posted by Nina Whitehurst | Apr 11, 2019 | 0 Comments

The key is to make your plans and prepare for problems BEFORE they happen. An article explaining why one should prepare before a crisis arises appeared on OakPark.com in “START WITH A PLAN (not a heart attack).” The article details an incident that happens all too often.

Modern Families Create New Questions

Posted by Nina Whitehurst | Feb 26, 2019 | 0 Comments

With the traditional family on a downward trend, the modern family is raising some new questions for estate planning. The rising numbers of modern and blended families have created some challenges for estate planning, according to Forbes in “How Long Will Stepmom Live? And Other Vexing Estate ...

Why Didn’t Cinderella’s Dad Plan Ahead?

Posted by Nina Whitehurst | Feb 12, 2019 | 0 Comments

The tale might be light-hearted, but it is actually a dire position for the daughter. Proper estate planning by Cinderella's father could have created an entirely different outcome in that very famous fairy tale, according to The National Law Review in “A Cautionary Fairy-Tale–If Only Cinder...

Estate Plan Can Put You Back in Control

Posted by Nina Whitehurst | Feb 04, 2019 | 0 Comments

Want to become more in control? Get that estate plan in order. When it comes to investments, the risks involved can make us feel we are not in control. However, if you want to feel more in control, take a good look at your estate plan, according to the Daily Camera...

  • 2 of 7

Areas We Serve

Aenean lacinia bibendum nulla sed consectetur. Donec sed odio dui. Maecenas sed diam eget risus varius blandit sit amet non magna. Nulla vitae elit libero, a pharetra augue. Curabitur blandit tempus porttitor. Morbi leo risus, porta ac consectetur ac, vestibulum at eros. Cras justo odio, dapibus ac facilisis in, egestas.

Menu