Elderlaw is a strange legal creature with its own rules and requirements, dealing with the person and the assets of the elderly and what to do with those assets once death occurs.
When an adult loses the ability to manage their afairs, the law provides for a White Knight to be appointed, as an adult guardian. But the measure is exceptional as it strips the incapable adult of virtually all his/her legal rights.
So much is, can and should be done via agents in today's complex international commercial world. This article gives you an "in's and out's" of this branch of the law; the law of agents and of agency. At the table are agents, principals and third-parties.
Without charitable trusts, the world would be an empty, selfish place. As close to the work of Jesus as the law can get, charitable trusts deserve all the attention they can get.
Trusts can arise miraculously from the soil of a few careless acts, and are not always overtly intentional creations. The law has peppered itself with these immaculately conceived trusts wherever the beast is needed for requirements of justice or fairness.
For some reason, the administration of estates in British Columbia has escaped all the plain language police and remains a very entrenched bastion of archaism, as anybody who has tried to probate an estate will know. Procedure evens differs from Supreme Court registry to registry! Regretably, this means you'd be foolish to try to run the estate application through the Court by yourself unless you are independently wealthy or a member of Mensa; preferably both. It does not have to be this way but it is so unless the estate is small, I can only advise strongly that you seek the assistance of a lawyer (preferably this one!). Lloyd Duhaime, May 2001.
Many a crank or mad scientist or Hollywood director have agonized over the potential for one human being to clone him/herself. Yet they need look no farther than the law of power of attorney to see it done as a power of attorney clones the donor and creates a clone, capable of walking the streets of Dodge and engaging the donor at every turn.
An Intro to Trust Law ... now them thar pregnant words if I ever saw 'em. And yet here it is; in plain language ... trust law intro for neophytes.
Absence makes the heart grow fonder ... and the law crazy! Rudderless property and rights create slow but certain havoc, a confusing state of affairs that the law remedies.
BC has emerged from the Dark Ages of Elder Law and provided their citizens with the option of Representation Agreements; complex document in which an adult may preselect a person to make personal and health care decisions for them in the unfortunate but sometimes inevitable event where the adults cannot make those decisions for herself.
As you quickly walk away from the chocolate cookie tray your wife specifically told you not to touch until after supper, you hear the Voice bellow down from Above: "You! I saw that! I will punish you severely unless you can ... recite the rule against perpetuities". You're a little shady on the Book of Genesis but you remember enough to think this Guy is not someone to fool with. Well, relax, let us save your life. You've come to the right place.
What is the difference between a tick and the tax man? A tick falls off of you when you die. It's risky business as the administrator can be personally liable for any unresolved tax debts.
The saga of the lost will, a much maligned story in the law of wills but and - oh! - such a real threat when, as it too often does in estate law, money rears its ugly head and makes decent folk turn crook and perjurer.
Trust law, given its equity origin, has a rich and still very vibrant case law backbone. This article sets out the nuts and bolts of the most important cases of them all.
When things get nasty, watch the dust fly off the old trust law books otherwised unused at the local law library. Here's your ring-side guide to the bouts.
Settlor asks trustee to manage to the benefit of a beneficiary. That's all folks .... until a bunch of judges and lawyers got their hands on the law.
aka ... "When More Than One Cook Shows Up For Kitchen Duty". What to do when the widow, the kids and the nice old lady next door all show up at the Court house seeking to administer Dad's estate?
In God's country, aka British Columbia, Canada, wills are, as elsewhere, the primary legal document in which to give marching orders in respect to a person's estate, which includes debts and assets. This article looks at wills from a BC slant.