conciselistings.com conciselistings.com
Search:    Main :> About Us :> Privacy :> ToS :> Add Your Link :> Add Your Article   
Free links exchange
 

Travel & Accommodation

Medicine & Treatment

Shopping & Auction

Health & Therapy

Internet & Computers

Culture & Art

Realty & Property

Careers & Employment

Science & Space

Entertainment

Issues & News

Home Family & Garden

Politics & Government

Outdoor & Sports

Drink & Food

Online & Board Games

Lifestyle & Fashion

Automotive

Society & Issues

Education & Reference

Self Healing

Business & Companies

Teens & Kids

Finance & Banking


 

Main –› Politics & Government –› Government Laws
 

Estate Planning - Changing A Will

 

Copyright 2006 Ronald Hudkins

I am taking you out of the will, or I am going to disinherit Gregory and leave all my money to Steven, are statements that seem far more like they belong in an Agatha Christie novel than in a serious discussion of estate planning.

Although the world is not filled with conniving relations who maneuver endlessly to gain the favor of a truly despicable older family matron or patron who uses their wealth to control them all until it culminates in murder most foul, this model is instructive regarding how changing a will can cause hard feelings between family members and create legal difficulties. The chief legal difficulty created by changing a will is that sometimes the two wills look like sequels to a movie and are literally called (Will I) and (Will II).

When this happens there will be, just as in the Agatha Christie mysteries, a group of relatives and friends who are favored by the first will (Will I) and not by the second (Will II). These relatives realize that if they can challenge and get rid of Will II, Will I will take its place, and they set out to get rid of Will II after the deceased is gone and can not take further action. Of course there are also the relations or friends that are favored by the revised will (Will II) and fight to keep it valid in the eyes of the law. There are many ways to attempt to invalidate a will that can be the subject of another article. The point of this article is to make it clear that changing a will by substituting it with another will drafted later in time is an exercise fraught with peril.

A better way to go is to expressly change from one will to the other or to expressly repudiate the first will. An express change is a change in writing. For example, if you want to get rid of the first will write that, I hereby repudiate the first will with this writing and all of its provisions hereby are to be considered void. It is difficult to get around the fact that you intend to get rid of the first will entirely if you fail to make such a claim in writing. Once that is settled, then you can begin the second will by stating again that you made another will before and that it is entirely void and does not in any way reflect your desires with respect to your property. And finally, include in the second will that it and it alone are a reflection of what you want when you are gone.

Another good way to go is not to let anyone, other than your attorney, know you are making a will or replacing an old will with a new one. People cannot fight over what they have no idea exists or has existed. This is a good way to keep the elements of an Agatha Christie novel regarding wills out of your life and the lives of your heirs. The fictional tyrant who rules the family with their notions of inheritance or disinheritance is the kind of person who has people fighting over their will because they are always blabbing about it. With wills it is best to adopt the policy that loose lips sink ships when it comes to your relatives fighting over what you meant after you are gone. This is not what anyone wants for their families and, with a little discretion and a lot of planning, it is easily avoided.

Author: Ronald Hudkins
 
Author Bio:

About Ronald E. Hudkins; Ronald Hudkins is a retired U.S. Army Military Police member that was assigned as a staff researcher. He has coordinated with military and criminal investigators, set on court marshals and worked closely with the Staff Judge Advocate Generals Office (JAG). He has a keen sense of legal matters - their interpretation, initiatives and guidelines. For imperative financial planning needs he suggests his book ?Asset Protection and Estate Planning for All Ages.? Additionally, he offers a Free Newsletter at his web site: www.AssetProtectNow.com

This article can be searched using: branch of government makes laws, which branch of government makes the laws
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Wells Fargo Contacts Customers About Recent Data Theft
 
Intellectual Property Protection: Legal Right Protection
 
Identity Theft And The Internet
 
Credit Cards and Identity Theft
 
Identity Theft - Monitor Your Credit Report
 
Spring Cleaning with a Fresh Start
 
Identity Theft Monitoring Agencies
 
Houston Personal Injury Settlements
 
Immigration: The Final Word - An Open Letter To Our Latino Brothers and Sisters
 
Florida Criminal Lawyers
 
 
 
Main :> Privacy :> ToS
Copyright © 2006-2008 www.conciselistings.com - All Rights Reserved.