| Lowell Massachusetts Wills Lawyer A will is a legal document that determines what happens to your property after your death. A will states who receives property and in what amounts. Property distributed under the terms of the will become the "probate" estate. Making a will is a responsibility, as well as a right that is protected by law.
In addition to distributing or transferring property, a will may have other functions. It may be used to name a guardian for any minor children or to create a trust and designate a trustee to handle an estate (property left after death) on behalf of children or others. A will may also be used to name a personal representative or "executor" to handle a decedent's (the person who died) property and affairs from the time of death until an estate is settled.
Planning a Will
A person does not need to have a large estate to plan and prepare a will. Anyone who owns property, whether "personal property," such as cash, stocks, jewelry or furniture, or "real property," such as land and/or a house, should prepare a will. If married, each spouse should have a will.
Lowell Massachusetts Trusts
Generally, a trust is a right in property (real or personal) which is held in a fiduciary relationship by one party for the benefit of another. The trustee is the one who holds title to the trust property, and the beneficiary is the person who receives the benefits of the trust. To understand the laws governing trusts a good starting point is the Restatement (2nd) of Trusts.
Many trusts are created as an alternative to or in conjunction with a will and other elements of estate planning. State law establishes the framework for determiningthe validity and limits for both.
Since many individuals neither set up trusts nor execute wills, state intestate succesion laws are an important complement to trust and estate law. They determine where an individual's assets go upon death in the absence of a will. |