Beyond the legalitiesBy Thorpe FacerMay 1999The membership of the Trusts and Estates Section of the ISBA is the second largest of any section.
A conversation with a clientBy Thomas A. PolachekSeptember 1999A. The short answer is that I cannot answer until I know more about your family and financial circumstances, although I will say that you should at least have a simple will (everything to spouse, if she/he survives, otherwise to children) and if you have minor children, you want to name who will be responsible for them ("guardians") in your will. More importantly, you may need an estate plan.
Donating bodies to scienceBy Deanne Morgan, J.D.May 1999On occasions, a client may express a desire to donate his or her body to science.
Editor’s noteFebruary 1999Editor's note: This newsletter issue contains a compendium of recent Illinois estate and probate decisions prepared by Donald L. Metzger of Edwardsville, Illinois.
Editors’ notesBy Paul A. Meints & Mark E. ZumdahlOctober 1999This issue is unusual from a couple of perspectives, none of which is really obvious to the reader.
Editor’s notesBy Paul A. Meints & Mark E. ZumdahlSeptember 1999This first issue of Volume 46 of the Trusts and Estates newsletter contains four articles.
Editor’s notesMay 1999Editor's note: This issue of the Trusts and Estates newsletter contains three interesting articles. The first article is by Deanne Morgan of Saint & Carmichael, P.C., Bloomington, Illinois.
Estate tax malpractice—PART IBy Robert Feinschreiber & Margaret KenOctober 1999Executors are increasingly willing to pursue malpractice claims against estate tax professionals, as witnessed by two recent cases, Stevenson v. Severs, 82 AFTR2d. Par. 98-6912 (D.C. 1998), and Johnson v. Sandler, Balkin, Hellman & Weinstein, 958 S.W.2d 42 (Mo.App.1998).
Estate tax malpractice—PART IIBy Robert Feinschreiber & Margaret KentNovember 1999The diversity of malpractice claims includes loss of the marital deduction, loss of the alternative valuation option, loss of "less than fair value" valuation, failure of life insurance trusts, inadequacy of disclaimers, late payments, erroneous tax returns, inheritance tax returns, misapplied Clifford trusts, misuse of QTIP trusts, erroneous fiduciary income tax returns, and the like.
Mistakes of practitioners in estate planningBy Richard P. MillerSeptember 1999A. The description of a specific bequest must be clear as to what property and to whom it should be distributed.
Package pricing for estate plannersBy Thorpe FacerSeptember 1999All of us want a profile practice that provides professional service to clients. We also want time with our families, vacations, the opportunity to pursue hobbies.