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The 101 Biggest Estate Planning Mistakes HE Nass

The 101 Biggest Estate Planning Mistakes By HE Nass

The 101 Biggest Estate Planning Mistakes by HE Nass


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Summary

A trust and estate lawyer to the stars offers an engaging look at how to avoid numerous estate planning mistakes In The 101 Biggest Estate Planning Mistakes, author Herbert Nass, an estate planner for some of today's most famous celebrities, offers an entertaining look at what not to do when setting up an estate plan, or administering an estate.

The 101 Biggest Estate Planning Mistakes Summary

The 101 Biggest Estate Planning Mistakes by HE Nass

A trust and estate lawyer to the stars offers an engaging look at how to avoid numerous estate planning mistakes In The 101 Biggest Estate Planning Mistakes, author Herbert Nass, an estate planner for some of today's most famous celebrities, offers an entertaining look at what not to do when setting up an estate plan, or administering an estate. By examining the mistakes made by some of the most well-known celebrities-from Bob Marley to John F. Kennedy, Sr. and Jr.-this book will guide readers toward making a successful estate plan and help them avoid many common pitfalls. Chapters cover such topics as: mistakes involving tangible personal property, real estate, executors and trustees, minors, or persons with disabilities; as well as disgruntled family and friends left behind. Puts estate planning in perspective through entertaining examples of mistakes celebrities have made in developing their own plans Taps into the voyeuristic interest we have in the lives of the rich and famous Offers an insider's look at many fascinating wills of the rich and famous Given the emotional, financial, and legal issues that arise from the death of a loved one-and the substantial assets that are transferred from one generation to the next at this time-understanding estate planning is essential. This book will put you in a better position to make more informed estate planning decisions.

About HE Nass

Herbert E. Nass (New York, NY) runs the Herbert E. Nass & Associates law firm, which?represents numerous celebrities involved in performing and visual arts and professional sports. Having specialized in legal matters involving Wills, Estates, and Trusts for almost 25 years, Nass has been listed as one of the top 100 attorneys practicing in this field (Worth magazine 2005, 2006).

Table of Contents

Preface. Acknowledgments Chapter 1 The Single Biggest Mistake - Not for the One Certainty in Life...Death. Mistake # 1: No Estate Whatsoever. Mistake # 2: Out-of-Date Wills. Mistake # 3: Losing your Will. Mistake # 4: Do-It-Yourselfers and Handwritten Wills. Mistake #5: Not Signing Your Will Because You Physically Can't. Mistake #6 Not Properly Executed Documents. Mistake #7: The Best Laid (Estate) Plans. Mistake #8: Dying Intestate or without a Will. Chapter 2 Mistakes Involving Tangible Personal Property. Mistake #9: Nemo Dat Quo Non Habet (Latin for He Who Hath Not Cannot Give). Mistake #10: Not Properly Documenting the Delivery and Completion of a Gift. Mistake #11: Selling Valuable Tangible Personal Property Too Close to Death. Mistake #12: Bequeathing Tangible Personal Property that You Do Not Own. Mistake #13: Mentioning Too Many Details in Your Will. Mistake #14: Not Including Any Details in Your Will. Mistake #15: Not Providing Properly for the Care of Your Pets After Your Death. Mistake #16: Leaving Too Much Money for Your Pets After Your Death. Mistake #17: Giving the Same Tangible Personal Property Item to More than One Person. Mistake #18: Not Properly Providing for the Disposition of Your Artworks after Your Death. Mistake #19: Not Providing for Your Tangible Personal Property in a Revocable Living Trust. Chapter 3 Mistakes Involving Real Estate. Mistake #20: Not Confirming How Title is Held to Real Estate Before or Right After Death. Mistake #21: Forgetting that Real Estate Usually Passes Subject to Loans and Mortgages. Mistake #22: Not Draining the Water Pipes in a Vacant House in Cold Weather. Mistake #23: Failing to Maintain Adequate Property and Casualty Insurance on Estate Property - Especially Vacant Real Estate. Mistake #24: Failing to Provide that Children, or others, May Continue to Reside in the Family Home with the Executor's or Trustee's Approval. Mistake #25: Failing to Provide that Existing Leases Will Terminate on Reasonable Terms After the Death of the Owner of the Property. Mistake #26: Owning Land, a House or an Apartment in a Foreign Country. Mistake #27: Assuming That a Co-operative Apartment Building Board Will Always Do What You Would Like It to Do. Mistake #28: Placing Real Estate in a Trust Without Checking on the Ramifications of Doing So. Chapter 4 Mistakes Involving Executors and/or Trustees. Mistake #29: Selecting Only One Executor in a Complicated Estate. Mistake #30: Selecting Too Many Executors. Mistake #31: Selecting an Even Number of Executors. Mistake #32: Selecting Executors with a Conflict of Interest. Mistake #33: Not Compensating (or Under-Compensating) Your Executors. Mistake #34: Not Selecting Your Spouse as an Executor. Mistake #35: Surprising Your Spouse with the Terms of Your Will. Mistake #36: Not Naming Your Children as Executors. Mistake #37: Naming Your Children as Executors. Mistake #38: Naming a Literary Executor in Your Will. Mistake #39: Naming a Corporate Fiduciary That Can Be Removed by an Individual Fiduciary. Chapter 5 Mistakes Involving Guardians, Minors or Step-Children. Mistake #40: Not Naming the Biological Parent as the Guardian of Your Minor Children. Mistake #41: Naming the Biological Parent as the Guardian of Your Minor Child. Mistake #42: Failing To Periodically Review Your Choice of Guardian(s). Mistake #43: Assuming that Your Step-Children Have the Same Legal Rights as Your Biological Children. Chapter 6 Mistakes Involving Prior Marriages, Prenuptial Agreements and Significant Others. Mistake #44: Not Taking into Account the Terms of an Existing Separation or Divorce Agreement. Mistake #45: Entirely Disinheriting Children or Grandchildren Out of Stupidity or Inadvertence. Mistake #46: Not Taking Your Spouse's Legal or Statutory Rights into Account. Mistake #47: Putting Your Child in Charge of a Surviving Spouse Who Is Not His or Her Parent. Mistake #48: Assuming that Your Divorce Automatically Revokes Your Will in its Entirety. Mistake #49: Not Updating Your Will at the Start of Your Divorce Proceedings. Mistake #50: Not Respecting the Validity of A Prenuptial Agreement. Mistake #51: Not Mentioning the Prenuptial Agreement in Your Will. Mistake #52: Failing to Fund a Revocable Living Trust During Your Lifetime in Order to Avoid Probate. Chapter 7 Estate Mistakes Involving Tax and Copyright Issues. Mistake #53: Eliminating Your Residuary Estate because of High Taxes on your Personal Property. Mistake #54: Not Taking Full Advantage of the Available Tax Exemption Amount. Mistake #55: Not Having Assets Titled in the Name of Each Spouse. Mistake #56: Failing to Ascertain if Gift Tax Returns Were Ever Filed. Mistake #57: Failing to Pay the 5 percent Annual Minimum Distribution Requirement for Private Charitable Foundations. Mistake #58: Not Having a Buy-Sell Agreement in a Closely Held Business, Partnership or Limited Liability Corporation. Mistake #59: Failing to Title Appreciated Real Estate in the Name of the Spouse More Likely to Die First. Mistake #60: Separating the Copyright Interest from the Work of Art Itself That Is Bequeathed to a Charity. Chapter 8 Estate Mistakes Involving Disgruntled Friends and Family. Mistake #61: Lack of a No Contest or In Terrorem Clause in Your Will. Mistake #62: Using A One Dollar No Contest/In Terrorem Clause in Your Will. Mistake #63: Using a Codicil Instead of a New Will. Mistake #64: Impulsively Changing Your Will By Whipping Out a Quick, Down and Dirty Codicil. Mistake #65: Not Contacting the Attorney for the Beneficiary of a Will When Trying to Settle a Dispute with the Attorney for the Executor. Mistake #66: Requiring Survivorship by a Certain Number of Days. Mistake #67: Not Including Your Long-Time Secretary or Assistant as a Beneficiary in Your Will. Mistake #68: Entirely Disinheriting Children or Grandchildren Out of Anger or Vindictiveness. Mistake #69: Failing to Mention the Names of the Heirs You Intend to Disinherit in Your Will. Mistake #70: Directing That a Specific Attorney or Other Advisor Be Hired by Your Executor. Mistake # 71: Not Taking Advantage of a Qualified Disclaimer within Nine Months of Death. Mistake #72: Offering Too Large an Amount at the Outset of Negotiations. Mistake #73: Arguing with Your Attorney about Legal Fees. Mistake #74: Fighting With a Lawyer with Criminal Clients. Mistake #75: Having Your Former Mother-in-Law Own a Life Insurance Policy on Your Life. Mistake #76: Not Getting the Original Will Back from the Person Replaced as an Executor. Chapter 9 Mistakes Involving Funerals, Burials or Cremation. Mistake #77: Not Appointing Someone to Make Burial and Funeral Arrangements. Mistake #78: Spending Too Much on a Funeral or Burial. Mistake #79: Providing Overly Detailed Funeral and Burial Instructions in Your Will. Mistake #80: Prepaying for Your Funeral, or Not. Mistake #81: Directing That There Be No Funeral or Memorial Service. Mistake #82: Losing the Deed for your Cemetery Plot. Mistake #83: Directing that Your Bodily Remains or Ashes Be Buried or Scattered in an Illegal Manner. Mistake #84: Directing that your Pet's Remains Be Buried Together with Yours. Mistake #85: Getting Too Religious in Your Will. Chapter 10 One of a Kind Mistakes by Celebrities and Icons. Mistake #86: Not Making Charitable Gifts in Your Will When Your Sons Are the Heirs to the British Throne. Mistake #87: Mentioning the Name of a Lawsuit Involving You in Your Own Will. Mistake #88: Leaving Your Estate to an Older Person Outright and Not in Trust. Mistake #89: Leaving It All to Your Girlfriend Who Has a Drug Addiction. Mistake #90: Making a Bequest with Politically Incorrect or Racist Strings Attached. Mistake #91: Not Properly Identifying an Organization that Receives a Bequest. Mistake #92: Not Providing How to Determine that Your Wife Has Regained Her Sanity. Mistake #93: Murdering Your Spouse (or Anyone Else). Chapter 11 Rookie or Boneheaded Mistakes. Mistake #94: Making a Material Misrepresentation on a Life Insurance Application. Mistake #95: Not Settling a Dispute When the Downside is much Greater than the Upside. Mistake #96: Making Handwritten Changes to a Will after it Has Been Signed and Witnessed. Mistake #97: Acting as a Witness to a Will In Which You are Named as a Beneficiary. Mistake #98: Removing the Staples from an Original Will. Mistake #99: Putting Your Original Will In a Bank Safe Deposit Box Which May be Sealed. Mistake #100: Preparing Only a Videotaped Will Instead of a Written One. Mistake #101: Owning a Large Amount of Life Insurance in Your Name Individually. About the Author. Index.

Additional information

GOR009912279
9780470375037
0470375035
The 101 Biggest Estate Planning Mistakes by HE Nass
Used - Very Good
Paperback
John Wiley & Sons Inc
20091124
304
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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