GUEST BLOG – Dr. Jomarie Zeleznik: An Elder Attorney is Holding the Umbrella

Doris is 97 years old and has lived in the same cozy apartment in the Bronx for 38 years. Every night she takes an elevator ride to her daughter’s apartment for dinner. Three other children live within driving distance and only her oldest son lives far away. In this family give and accept are done without the words “obligation” or “burden.” Doris saved for a rainy day in old age, and like many middle class people of her generation she also saved to leave something for each of her five children. I am told she reads her financial reports weekly and is still earning from wise investment choices.  Many years ago, Doris set up five separate accounts in her own

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Smart Ideas for Making Your Agents Known (When Needed)

Too many attorneys fail to inform a person’s Power of Attorney, Health Care Agent, or Executor that he/she has been named as a person’s agent or, even worse, fail to tell their clients to inform these people of their responsibilities. These practitioners appear to have the attitude of “I’ve been paid, you have your legal documents, let’s both move onto the next thing in our lives.” While this does not rise to the level of legal malpractice, it certainly is inconsiderate and potentially dangerous, for the following reasons: These documents are not public record. If there is an emergency, how is a Health Care Agent going to be identified by the admitting health care facility? The documents may be hard

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“My Estate” is the WORST Beneficiary

Unless you own property jointly or in a trust, certain items of property have to pass through your Probate Estate (i.e. under your Will). The car or bank account solely in your name, stock certificates (an awful form of property), the family house you did not place in a Trust, your personal property, all pass under your Will. Or, if you don’t have a Will, through Administration under the “Laws of Intestacy.” However, some people make the misinformed decision to leave “operation of law” assets, such as retirement plans or life insurance, to their estate. Let me be very clear here: This is a BAD idea. The only reason someone would errantly do this is because they want court supervision of

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