Practice Areas

Estate Planning Tips

Have a Will.

Hire The Brunson Law Firm, L.L.C to draft your Will and set up other Estate Planning options.

Set up a Joint Account with the person who will be responsible for settling your estate.

Make sure that property that do not pass under your Will is properly designated as to the Beneficiary Information.

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Let Attorney Brunson help you in your Estate Planning.

 

The Brunson Law Firm, L.L.C will put you first. Hire an experienced attorney who will be responsive to your legal needs.

Wills & Estate Planning

The Brunson Law Firm, L.L.C assists individuals in creating a will to avoid intestacy. A will enables a person to avoid intestacy. The property of a person who dies without a will is distributed according to the intestacy laws of the jurisdiction of where the person resided at the time of death. A will offers flexibility and enables a person to designate beneficiaries of the person's assets. In some situations, a person may wish to create a trust to make special provision for a beneficiary who is disabled or under the age of majority, or to avoid probate altogether, a person may wish to create a living trust.

A will applies to that property held in the decedent’s name or property that is held or payable in such a way that it must pass through the decedent’s probate estate. A share of property held jointly with another with rights of survivorship will pass to that person who held the property jointly with the deceased. When buying property, a person should keep in mind the difference between owning property as tenants-in-common or as joint tenants. A share of property that the decedent held as tenants-in-common passes to the decedent’s estate. To find out all the types of property that does not pass under a Will, Contact Attorney Brunson at 1-800-903-7087.

Call 1-800-903-7087 to find out what property passes under a Will and what property does not!

 

Health Care Power of Attorney and Living Wills

Why should you have a health care power of attorney?

A health care power of attorney document enables you to appoint someone to make health care decisions for you if you cannot make the decisions for yourself. This power includes the power to make decisions about life-sustaining treatment. A document that enables you to give specific directives as to the course of treatment that is to be taken by caregivers, or, in particular, in some cases forbidding treatment should you be unable to give informed consent ("individual health care instruction") due to incapacity is called a living will. The Living Will usually accompanies the health care power of attorney document.

How can you contact us?

You can contact us directly at a toll free number. The number is 1-800-903-7087. Call now for your FREE telephone consultation.