Wills are a legal document that spells out who will inherit people’s property when they die. Specifically, a last will and testament is a written document or declaration that identifies a person's requests and testimonial on how personal assets and finances are to be distributed and to whom they are supposed to be distributed. There will also be an executor appointed in the will. The deceased individual specifies where the assets are allotted to, for instance, if it goes to charity, a group, or specific individuals as stated in the will. A last will and testament will also address financial accounts, financial interests, debt, and other financial and non-financial items related to the testator's estate. Our business attorneys can advise you on a wide range of legal matters including, will-drafting, probate, and trusts. For a comparison of a last will and testament to a trust, follow this link:
Comparing a Last Will & Testament to a Trust
There are many benefits to creating a last will & testament, mainly the security and organization of assigning personal and financial assets to beneficiaries of the testator's choice upon death. Simply, the testator retains control over what happens to his or her assets in the case of death, as well as creating a presiding document for use in the probate court in the process of settling an estate. Without a will, state intestacy laws automatically determine where your estate will go, and unfortunately, state law may not match what the testator actually intended or wanted. The process of drafting and creating a valid will are as follows:
At Wilson Legal Group, our estate lawyers utilize a team-based approach that benefits from having access to multiple attorneys with substantive years of experience in many practice areas. Whatever your estate or trust needs may be, our business attorneys have the talent, resources, and expertise to meet them in an efficient, timely, and cost-effective manner.
Any oral wills created on September 1, 2007, or later are not legally valid.

The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has defined a person's estate as the fair market value of everything a person owns at the time of your death minus debts. The totality of a person's estate would include, but is not limited to, the following: bank accounts, stocks and bonds, real estate, business interests and property, personal property, and life insurance policies. Items like cars, jewelry, coin collections, and artwork would be considered personal property for the purposes of a last will and testament; however, the proceeds of life insurance would not as they can only pass through the beneficiary designated on the insurance policy.

First, dying without a will allows state law to dictate what the court system will give to your heirs which may not match your intents while alive. Having a properly executed Will prevents your property from getting distributed by state law and significantly decreases the infighting among your heirs (e.g. your children cannot fight over your assets if you tell them exactly what each gets). Further, not having a will may cause financial and emotional pain if assets you intended to leave to your spouse end up at least, in part, going to your spouse's step children. If you have minor children and die without a will, the court will appoint a guardian based on statutory guidelines and without any guidelines from you. This means that your children could becomes wards of the state, or even an inappropriate relative who may squander the children's inheritance as trustee. Importantly, dying without a will leads to significant litigation and prevents assets from being distributed to those in need. Trustees, legal fees, and the costs of administrators can all be avoid by a validly executed will before death.
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