Wills and Lifetime PlanningNSW
This practical legal publication allows practitioners to confidently prepare wills, powers of attorney, enduring guardianship applications, and advance care planning in NSW.
3 Matter Plans
Overview
This practical legal publication allows practitioners to confidently prepare wills, powers of attorney, enduring guardianship applications, and advance care planning in NSW.
The guides follow comprehensive and methodical Retainer Instructions designed to assist with all matters, whether for a single client or complex families, including where the clients have an extensive or complicated asset portfolio.
Precedents include various ways to deal with blended families, superannuation death benefits and rights to occupy.
The commentary, which has been prepared by experienced legal practitioners, includes discussion of tax treatment for superannuation, use of testamentary trusts, family provision considerations, and dealing with assets in multiple jurisdictions.
Lawyers can take the worry and risk out of will drafting and maximise its value to their practice by using this excellent and easy-to-follow publication.
Also included is 101 Succession Answers, which is a useful reference guide.
Precedents provided with this publication include:
- Wills for individual, spouses, and blended families, and that create testamentary discretionary trusts;
- Library of clauses, deeds, contracts, and codicils;
- Library of attestation clauses;
- Testamentary capacity checklist;
- Powers of attorney, enduring guardianship appointments, and advance health directives;
- Suite of client letters at different stages of the process.
Ready To Use Resources
Choose from ready-to-use legal documents within this Publication.
3 Matter Plans Included
- ALERTS - Nil“”
- Full Commentary - Wills (NSW)“null”
- Reference materials
- Overview“The law relating to wills in New South Wales is covered by the Succession Act 2006. A will is a document containing a person’s instructions about distributing their property and assets after death. Failure to make a will results in the statutory distribution of the deceased's assets.”
- Summary of the process“The usual steps in a will matter are:”
- A. Getting the matter underway
- B. Will considerations and other estate planning
- C. The will
- D. Execution
- E. Finalising the matter
- Comments and suggestions for By Lawyers“null”
Our Authors
More than 45 legal professionals have contributed to By Lawyers' Australian publications, all helping to ensure content is updated regularly to reflect changes in legislation, practice and procedure.
Meet Our Authors