When I married my current wife, we both had to change our wills which was a complicated procedure – not because we had a lot of money or property to divide – but because the wills had to be written twice!
Even though the wills were pretty simple and straightforward, one set of wills had to be written in Spanish for the Ecuador courts and another set translated into English for the United States because the inheritance laws and tax codes differ in each country.
I did mine on line. Had it witnessed by a couple friends and notarized by another one, all free of charge. I won’t be around to see whether it holds up. :)
A little pet peeve here… people (family) who fight over what someone puts in their will. It’s THEIR money etc. They can do whatever they d*** please with it.
dadthedawg Premium Member over 3 years ago
Dewey, Cheatum, and Howe…..
rshive over 3 years ago
Here lies the body of Mary Meek. Her will was strong. But her won’t was weak.
Zykoic over 3 years ago
Had a lawyer who kept placing a clause in there that gave them power to plunder….sorry, guide the disposition of assets. Yeah, no thanks.
Sanspareil over 3 years ago
Durable power of attorney is the way to go!
My mum did it and saved her sons a lot of bureaucratic grief!!
DavidHewlett over 3 years ago
Relax, ‘Cosmo’, the lawyers in ‘Treetops’ aren’t as ‘sticky-fingered’ as the ‘money-grubbing’ ones in the real world ! ! ! !
littlejohn Premium Member over 3 years ago
Why complain? You can’t take “it” with you, you know.
jcwrocks69 over 3 years ago
My father’s estate lawyer scammed my sister and I out of thousands. I was a naive first-time executor, and he was a seasoned crook.
david_42 over 3 years ago
When we die it all goes to the Oregon Humane Society, no estate taxes to dilute the loot.
Linguist over 3 years ago
When I married my current wife, we both had to change our wills which was a complicated procedure – not because we had a lot of money or property to divide – but because the wills had to be written twice!
Even though the wills were pretty simple and straightforward, one set of wills had to be written in Spanish for the Ecuador courts and another set translated into English for the United States because the inheritance laws and tax codes differ in each country.
petermerck over 3 years ago
Vulture /lawyer, just saying.
DCBakerEsq over 3 years ago
Friggin’ attorneys.
Snolep over 3 years ago
I did mine on line. Had it witnessed by a couple friends and notarized by another one, all free of charge. I won’t be around to see whether it holds up. :)
dadthedawg Premium Member over 3 years ago
Where there’s a will…..there’s a way.
michael3114 over 3 years ago
You gotta have something to leave something.
Nala the Great over 3 years ago
There is legally only one thing you need a lawyer for is adoption. Anything else you can do pro se! At least that was the law in NY in the early 70’s
KEA over 3 years ago
A little pet peeve here… people (family) who fight over what someone puts in their will. It’s THEIR money etc. They can do whatever they d*** please with it.