SOCIAL: estate planning/will question
Brian Rice
brice at bigloops.com
Tue Dec 4 13:47:51 PST 2007
I've done will-writing both with a lawyer (the first time) and using
the Nolo Press make-your-own-will book (the second time). Knowing
what I know now, I'd recommend that everybody* start with a Nolo will,
and that people with more complex needs (especially people who want to
set up trusts for the care of children) then continue on to a lawyer
for Version 2.0.
The process of working through the Nolo will forced me to answer a lot
of questions that would have saved time with the lawyer. And, in
California and lots of other places, you don't have to have a lawyer
or file anything with a court in order to have a valid will. So that
means that it's easy to have Version 1.0 in force while you take your
time with Version 2.0.
The version of the Nolo will book I used seems to now have been
replaced by a will-maker software product jointly produced by Nolo and
Quicken:
http://www.amazon.com/Quicken-Willmaker-Plus-2008-Essentials/dp/1413307167/
* The exception to this advice: Nolo books don't apply in Louisiana.
So anybody reading this in Louisiana needs a good Louisiana lawyer,
and also a stack of beignets (yum).
Brian
On Dec 4, 2007, at 10:51 AM, Amy Tanner wrote:
>
> Hi Folks
>
> Can anyone recommend a lawyer who does estate planning/wills/living
> trust/that kind of thing that they have used? Peat and I are
> looking for someone who is technically competent but also who has a
> good interpersonal side.
>
> Thanks, amy
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