Archive for September, 2009
this lady was the caretaker of a old man that has now passed away, the day of his burial she read the will that was made with the notary , it read that the property of the old man was to be divided between her and his two daughters , his daughters found out that the notary was the caretakers relative, is that valid here in california, the caretaker been spending all the money from the rents and has not shared anything with the daughters, the man had $$$$$$ but nobody knows what happened to it
Juliana Rade
This first book, St. Matthew’s Gospel, was not written until about ten years after Our Lord’s Ascension. St. John’s fourth gospel and Apocalypse or Book of Revelations were not written until about 100 A. D.
Imagine how the present-day privately interpreted “Bible-only” theory would have appeared at a time when the books of the New Testament were not only unavailable, but most of them had not yet been written.
Lupe Siniscalchi
my brother waited until the last minute, now he needs one right away. his daughter is the bene of his life insurance, but he wants to define who will have what from a little bit of money in his bank account. it sounds simple, but i don’t know anything about this stuff. thank you!
thank you both for the info!
Page Blachly
My Mum died this year.
Her estate consists of just a large house.
She named 4 people as beneficiaries of her estate – her 3 adult children (by 2 different husbands) and the husband (who is the father of the youngest son – a solicitor).
She left half of her estate to her 3 adult sons and the other half to her husband. The husband and his son (the solicitor) are the only trustees for the estate. The 2 eldest sons are only executors and beneficiaries (with both their inheritances being held in trust by the step-father and half-brother).
The problem is this… her Will does not stipulate any time-frame, or date, for the sons to receive their share of the inheritance. What rights do they have to force their inheritance payment sooner rather than later?
Can only the trustees decide when the eldest sons should get their inheritance? Can the 2 eldest sons be kept waiting indefinitely even until their own deaths?
I must also mention that… the half-brother (who is a trustee) is also a solicitor and may have helped the dying mother write her will in the first place.
Can a beneficiary ALSO be a trustee AND an executor – and possibly the same person/solicitor that even advised the Mum to write her Will in the way she did? Remarks have already been made (by a solicitor friend) as to the way the WIll has been worded and the oblique way way that the deceased true intentions have been described. Long before she died the Mother stated several times to all 3 sons that she wanted the eldest sons to get their inheritance sooner rather than later because they are much much older than the youngest son. However, the Will makes no clear mention of this.
I would appreciate any advise anyone can offer. Thanks.
Spencer Utzig






















