Your reasons for disinheriting your child must be valid

After you die, you won’t be here to explain your reasons, which is why it is commonly recommended that you write out your reasons when you make your will.
Read More →After you die, you won’t be here to explain your reasons, which is why it is commonly recommended that you write out your reasons when you make your will.
Read More →If you leave that child little or nothing and he challenges your will after you have died, how can the court fairly evaluate whether you have met your moral obligations if all they have is that child’s side of the
Read More →By learning how the courts apply that legislative provision when second guessing a testator’s allocations, you can be best armed to anticipate how your own will might be attacked
Read More →Encase your testamentary wishes in as much steel and concrete as possible to dissuade your beneficiaries from attempting to challenge them.
Read More →Only fifty-five per cent have a current and legal will? It seems I put the cart way, way before the horse with my last column, warning about wills being challenged in court! I had no idea that so many haven’t
Read More →You can’t take it with you. How much say do you have about who gets your inheritance? Isn’t a will iron clad? They are not as iron clad as you may think. There are laws that allow the iron cladding
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