by Laurie Ohall | Jan 27, 2011 | Probate
is necessary in order to pass title or ownership of an asset to the decedent’s beneficiaries. If the decedent died with a Florida Will, this is called a “testate” estate and the Will dictates who gets the assets and who gets to administer the estate. If the decedent...
by Laurie Ohall | Jan 21, 2011 | Power of Attorney for Estate Planning, Probate
That depends on how the bank account was titled. Assets must go through Florida probate only if they are owned solely in the decedent’s name at death. In other words, there were no co-owners on the asset nor were there beneficiary designations (such as with life...
by Laurie Ohall | Jan 17, 2011 | Estate Planning, Probate
What is probate? Probate in Florida is a court-supervised process where assets of a deceased person (the decedent) are identified and gathered by the personal representative/executor (means the same thing). Essentially, the personal representative pays the decedent’s...
by Laurie Ohall | Jan 11, 2011 | Estate Planning, Probate
Durable Power of Attorney: can it be used after death? I had a client call me last month after her mother passed away. She wanted to know why she couldn’t use the Florida durable power of attorney (DPOA) she had for her mother to close out a bank...
by Laurie Ohall | Jan 5, 2011 | Estate Planning
If you are a teacher, student or someone who itemizes on their tax return, don’t plan on filing your tax return early. Because Congress waited so long in passing the Tax Relief Act of 2010, the Internal Revenue Service will be not be begin processing some tax returns...