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Wills and Trusts Books
Wills and Trusts in a Nutshell
by Robert L. Mennell - West Group - Paperback - 365 pages
2nd edition (July 1994)
Federal Estate and Gift Taxation in a Nutshell
by John K. McNulty - West Group - Paperback - 481 pages
5th edition (August 1994)
Introduction to Estate Planning in a Nutshell
by Robert J. Lynn - West Group - Paperback - 352 pages
4th edition (June 1992)
Uniform Probate Code in a Nutshell
by Lawrence H. Averill - West Group - Paperback - 616 pages
5th edition (January 2000)
Trusts (Hornbook Series)
by George T. Bogert - West Wadsworth - Hardcover - 793 pages
6th Student edition (June 1987)
Wills, Trusts and Estates: Including Taxation and Future Interests (Hornbook Series)
by William M. McGovern, et al - West Wadsworth - Hardcover - 790 pages - 2nd edition (June 2000)
Wills & Other Principles of Succession (Hornbook Series)
by Thomas E. Atkinson - West Wadsworth - Hardcover - 975 pages
2nd edition (April 1988)
Wills, Trusts and Estates : Including Taxation and Future Interests (Hornbook Series)
by William M. McGovern, et al - West Wadsworth - 996 pages
Practioner edition (August 1988)
Wills and Trusts : Laws of the United States (Quick Reference Law Series) by Dan Sitarz, Daniel Sitarz - Nova Pub Co - Paperback - 160 pages - (September 1999)
A Family Guide to Wills, Funerals, and Probate : How to Protect Yourself and Your Survivors
by Theodore E. Hughes, David Klein - Facts on File, Inc. - Paperback - 288 pages - 2nd edition (July 2001)
The Complete Idiot's Guide to Wills and Estates
by Stephen M. Maple, Steve Maple - Alpha Books - Paperback - 314 pages - 1 edition (September 9, 1997)
SEC Launches New Offensive to Alert Investors... sec.gov, Apr 15, 2008
The Securities and Exchange Commission today announced the launch of its latest offensive targeting online boiler rooms, cold calls, and other potentially fraudulent fina...
A "Living Trust" can be used to hold legal title to and provide a mechanism to manage your property
You can select a person or or a group of people to serve as the Trustee. They then carry out the instructions you want in the Trust and name one or more Successor Trustees to take over should you no longer be able to. Unlike a Will, a Trust generally goes into effect immediately, functions throughout your lifetime even if you become incapacitated, and continues even after your death. Most Trusts are revocable meaning that the person who creates the Trust can make modifications or terminate the Trust in the future.
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