In California, a printed Will (that is any will that comes out of a printer) must be signed by the person creating it, and by two witnesses. If the Will is not signed by two witnesses, then it is invalid. Many people think they can have the Will notarized, but notarization does nothing to validate […]
Category: Contested Wills
Occasionally we see cases where a parent leaves all of their assets to a child with the understanding that the child will share the assets with the siblings. For example, a parent may name one child as a joint tenant on a house or bank account, and then expect that the asset will be shared […]
Many times clients will tell us that their mom, dad, grandmother, whomever would never have disinherited them and everybody knows that to be true. Why isn’t that enough to overturn a Trust or Will? The answer lies in the type of evidence you must provide to the court if you want the court to overturn […]
When is a Will a Will? When the court issues an order saying the Will is valid. Before that time, the Will is just a possible Will. In other words, Wills do not take effect, and have no power to control the distribution of an estate, until the court first decides the Will is valid. […]
Statutes of limitations are the deadlines by which you must file a lawsuit. We are seeing more and more people miss the filing deadline in the California Trust and Will Litigation arena. We think the reason this is occurring is because the statutes of limitations for Trust and Will issues are complicated. There is not […]
Under California financial elder abuse law, you must prove four elements to establish undue influence: (1) vulnerability of the victim, (2) apparent authority of the wrongdoer, (3) actions and tactics of the wrongdoer, and (4) an inequitable result. Two of these elements stand out over the rest: vulnerability and actions and tactics. Actions and tactics refers […]
As lawyers, we have heard many people tell us their version of events that led up to a wrongly created Trust or Will. And one of the main issues we try to determine is whether there are facts to support an undue influence claim. Overturning a Will or Trust based on undue influence is not so […]
You can take any legal action you like in California court on your own, if you choose to do so; provided that, you’re not acting as an Executor, Trustee, or agent (all of which must be represented by lawyers in court). The problem with representing yourself in court is the complexities of California Will contest cases. The […]
Wills and Trusts are vastly different types of documents. They may seem similar in some respects, but they are more different than they are similar. What is a Will? For starters, a Will is a “testamentary” document meaning it must meet certain formalities to be a valid document. All Wills must be in writing, signed by […]
Don’t you believe it. This may be one of the oldest arguments in the book. Siblings often argue that whatever mom and dad gave you during life belongs to the estate. Or a closely related argument: we are going to count your lifetime gifts against your share of the estate. It really is all the same thing, siblings hate […]