Estate Administration

Total 501 Posts

Trustees – it’s time to start gathering information

With 6 weeks until the end of 2023, it is a good time to remind trustees of their obligations in respect of the trusts that they are responsible for managing and administering. Last year, I wrote a blog where I reminded trustees of discretionary trusts of the importance of documenting income payment decisions before the end of the year. Trustees should start considering what they plan on doing with the….

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Canada Revenue Agency, Estate Administration, Tax Issues, Trustee, Trusts

Will We Need to Start Remembering the “Right to be Forgotten”?

Some myosotis flowers, colloquially known as "forget-me-nots". I thought these would be appropriate for this blog post.

Pictured: Some myosotis flowers; colloquially known as “forget-me-nots”. I thought these would be appropriate for this blog post. In the estate planning world, we often see clients who want to be remembered for generations to come. For example, this could be through establishing a charitable gift, trust or foundation in their will; some people even find value in having some sort of organization, space or physical object named after them…..

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Courts, Estate Administration, Estate Planning, Executors, In the News

Factors to Consider when Rebutting the Presumption that a Lost Will was Destroyed by the Testator

Today’s blog was written by Jonathon Vander Zee, student-at-law at de VRIES LITIGATION LLP The original copy of a last will and testament is lost and cannot be found… now what? Losing an original copy of a will does not necessarily mean that it is no longer legally binding or invalid. Where a copy of the original will exists, a party may make an application to the court to have….

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Estate Administration, Estate Administration and Probate Applications, Estate Litigation, Uncategorized

Taking Back Control of Real Property

It is important to consider estate planning objectives when entering into real estate transactions. For example, a client may intend to retain control of real property in that they intend to be able to dispose of it on death. However, if the relevant estate planning objectives are not identified and considered at the time of the transaction, other goals may be prioritized instead; this may result in the structure of….

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Estate Administration, Estate Planning, Property, Real Estate

What Happens if Something Happens to your Executor? – Part Two

It is very difficult to plan for every possible scenario when you are drafting your will. Not only is it important to consider who to name as your executor, but you also need to think about what would happen if something happened to your executor. In an earlier blog, I looked at what happens if an executor dies before the testator and offered some practical considerations. Today’s blog will explore….

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Estate Administration, Estate Planning, Executors, Trustee

Dearly Departed…or not?

A recent Toronto Star article[1] highlighted what has become a bit of an interesting viral trend in the modern internet era: “scorched earth” obituaries, written by one or more of a deceased person’s relatives, who do not have anything nice to say in their send-off of the departed. The article provides a few highlights from recent examples, including an obituary prepared by a deceased woman’s children that said “they understand that….

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Estate Administration, Estate Planning, Family Conflict
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