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Articles Posted in miami probate attorney

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What is the Current Estate Tax or “Death Tax”?

Answer by Miami Trust Attorney Phillip B. Rarick, Esq. The estate tax exemption for 2012 is $5.12 million; estates above $5.12 million are taxed at the rate of 35%.   Unfortunately,  absent congressional action, the estate tax exemption will fall back to $1 million per person with a top rate at…

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How To Avoid Probate?

Answer by Miami Trust  Attorney Phillip B. Rarick, Esq. The best way to avoid probate is to have a basic estate plan that includes a living revocable trust as your master set of instructions to make sure you give what you have, the way you want, and when you want.…

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Dying Without a Will in Florida: Who Gets What?

Answer by Phillip B. Rarick, Miami Probate Attorney Everyone has a will, whether you know it or not.  If you fail to plan for this certainty, the state of Florida has a will for you: it is called intestate succession. A common question we get from relatives of family members…

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Beware of Florida Single Member LLC’s: Seven Ways to Avoid this Sand Trap

By: Phillip B. Rarick, J.D., and Jay R. Beskin, J.D. Miami Asset Protection Attorneys Background Summary: Last year in a blog we advised you that the “Olmstead Patch” – the Florida legislature’s attempt to fix a hole in the Florida LLC statute as a result of the 2010 Olmstead decision…

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Florida Legal Resources

I am pleased to announce a valuable new feature on our web site that I trust you will find helpful.   We want to share with you all the Florida local and state legal resources that we routinely use in our probate, corporate, guardianship, and estate planning practices. Resources is a…

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Moving to Florida: Tips On How To Avoid The Tax Traps

A common over-sight of persons moving to Florida is failing to take their trust.  They may have packed their trust and taken it with them, but the trust situs remains in their original state.  This is usually a mistake. The fact that a client has moved to Florida will not…

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New Florida Durable Power of Attorney Law Makes Sweeping Changes

Introduction The Florida legislature recently enacted the “Florida Power of Attorney Act” (“FPOA”, Fla. Stat. §§709.2101-.2402), fundamentally overhauling existing law, and making sweeping new changes.   Even though the new law recognizes durable power of attorneys (“DPA’s) executed under the prior law, we are advising clients to update their DPA, if…

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FLORIDA GUARDIANSHIP QUICK REFERENCE GUIDE

By  Phillip B. Rarick, Esq., Miami Probate Attorney Introduction The commencement of a Florida guardianship is typically used in two situations – either when a person may be incapacitated or when a minor receives assets in excess of $15,000.  If a guardianship is sought because someone may be incapacitated, then typically…

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FAST TRACK FLORIDA PROBATE

By Phillip B. Rarick, Miami Probate Attorney Introduction Most states have streamlined probate procedures for smaller estates.  Florida’s procedure is called Summary Administration and can be used to expedite administration of estates not exceeding $75,000 or when the decedent has been dead for more than two years.  F.S. 735.201(2).  It…

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