1. Read your documents.
Are all the names right? Have all of
your will or trust beneficiaries been listed? Are there
terms and provisions you don’t understand? Please let us
know immediately if your documents are wrong or you don’t
understand them.
2. Read the information pamphlets we gave you.
Depending upon what estate planning
documents we prepared for you, you may have received from us
a number of different information pamphlets. These pamphlets
contain useful and important information. Please read them.
3. Decide who needs to get copies of your documents.
It is seldom necessary that the
personal representative you named in your Will have a copy
of it. After all, a Will doesn’t have any legal effect at
all until your death. But you may want your personal
representative to know where you keep your Will, so that it
can be easily retrieved when that time comes.
You should take the original of your
health care power of attorney (advance directive) to your
family physician to make a copy for your medical records.
You might want to take your durable power of attorney to
your bank to make a copy for your banking records. Do not
allow your doctor or your bank to retain the original of
your documents.
You probably will want your
attorney-in-fact and your health care agent to have a copy
of your durable power of attorney and your health care
advance directive.
4. Talk to members of your family any other persons who
may be affected by your planning.
Share the information we gave you about
powers of attorneys with your attorney-in-fact and your
health care agent. Make sure they know what your wishes are
and what they are supposed to do -- before a crisis occurs.
Consider whether you should share the
details about the disposition of your estate with your
family or other beneficiaries of your estate. Will
particular or unusual bequests create problems for the
recipient or for other persons who may have expected to
inherit from you? Remember, one of the most valuable
legacies you can leave behind is peace and harmony in your
family.
Have a good plan for the disposition of
your personal property. For most people, items of personal
property invoke emotions and feelings. Our experience has
been that conflicts often arise over personal property that
has little monetary value but great sentimental value. Talk
with your family about who should get what.
5. Review beneficiary designations and joint ownership
of assets.
Certain assets such as life insurance
policies, retirement accounts, and bank accounts have
beneficiary forms that trump wills. That means the funds in
these accounts will be distributed to whomever you named as
beneficiaries, no matter what you specify in your will. Be
sure to check the beneficiaries on these accounts -- and
make any changes -- to align with your Will.
Some people have named family members
as joint owners of certain assets, usually bank accounts.
Unless they are owned by husband-and-wife, it is seldom a
good idea to add an owner to your accounts. Remember that
upon your death, the funds in these accounts will belong to
the joint owner, no matter what you specify in your Will.
6. Now is a good time to organize your important papers.
If you haven't done it already,
organize household and family documents by category in a
file cabinet or accordion folder. Make sure you have copies
of your birth certificates, marriage certificates, and any
pertinent medical histories. Write your name and the date
on any piece of paper that a stranger could not immediately
identify as pertaining to you, such as a list of the
assets you own, the names, addresses, and phone numbers of
your family doctors, and a list of the prescription
medications you are taking.
We have provided you with a blank form
“My Important Papers” behind this tab to help you organize
this information and keep it up to date.
Keep your important documents -- wills,
birth certificates, insurance papers, etc. --secure by
investing in a fireproof cabinet or box.
7. Review your important papers regularly and keep them
up to date.
You may want to make changes to your
documents if an individual named in your Will or Power of
Attorney dies or becomes disabled, in the event of births or
divorces in your family, or if you inherit money or
property.