Archive for June, 2010

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

Good, Bad, and Ugly Estate Planning

What’s the difference between a good, bad, or ugly estate plan?

Your answer may differ if you are the person creating the disastrous estate plan or a victim of poor planning.

If you are a victim of bad estate planning you have a different perspective. You could be forced to fix estate planning mistakes.

Ugly planning usually leaves you with few options, except going to court to have a judge fix things.

Your estate planning can have profound consequences for other people. Doing something as simple as dividing your estate unequally between your children could be a bad idea.

Will you be responsible?

Your children may become the victims of this plan.  They cannot understand why they were not treated equally by their parents. They end up living their lives with the pain of sleepless nights.

Sometimes, you create an estate plan that leaves spouses unprepared to inherit all your problems. These can be financial difficulties, former spouses, and difficult business relationships.

Sometimes you do not comply with your obligations under family law to support your spouse. You force your spouse to hire lawyers to go to court. This legal process only causes further financial hardship for everyone involved in the estate.

Sometimes, the problem is your estate pays more than it should in taxes. That’s bad.

Not taking the time to prevent problems like these will cause you to leave the wrong kind of legacy. After all, are we not here to enrich the world and not leave others with added hardships?

Good Estate Planning reflects the words of Thomas Mann who said, “A man’s dying is more the survivors’ affair than his own.”

Good Estate Planning is designed to prevent problems for the people we leave behind.

Good Estate Planning requires you to invest in professional advice.

There are no other shortcuts.

Do you disagree?  Then send me your comments.

If you believe you can do it yourself put your estate plan to the test. Let a professional offer you their comments. Then you will know if your estate plan passes the good, bad, or ugly test.

For more information, you can read Estate to the Heart How to Plan Wills and Estates for Your Loved Ones. Visit EstateTherapy.com today to read a sample chapter.

How Do Estate Lawyers Charge?

How Do Estate Lawyers Charge?

How Do Estate Lawyers Charge?

How you will be charged can be based on these three factors:

1. Experience – expect specialists to charge more. They may identify issues quickly and in the long run, effectively save you time and money.

2. Complexity – more time is needed if you own a business, need detailed tax advice, have a child to protect, or a blended family situation.

3. Location – competition where you live may be a factor affecting price and the quality of legal work.

Some lawyers may be defensive when you request a fixed fee quote or estimate over the phone. This is a normal professional reaction.

Lawyers are not permitted to solicit work from prospective clients on the basis of their fee quotes. You should be able to request that a schedule of fees be sent to you by email or mail.

You may consider yourself lucky that the will prepared by your lawyer is only two pages long. On the other hand, you could be impressed that you fell asleep trying to read a 35-page monster will.

Choose a lawyer who can demonstrate current expertise and can give you guidance on complex decisions.