Bridgeport Estate Lawyer, West Virginia

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Gale E. Carroll

Lawsuit & Dispute, Estate, Criminal, Business
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  32 Years

Robert L. Greer

Lawsuit & Dispute, Estate Planning, Estate, Business
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  33 Years

Matthew Bryan Hansberry

Real Estate, Litigation, Immigration, Wills & Probate, Sexual Harassment
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  18 Years

Sherri S. Whalen

Litigation, Trusts, Elder Law, Personal Injury
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  34 Years

Shawn Angus Morgan

Real Estate, Health Care, Estate, Bankruptcy & Debt
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  30 Years

Scott E. Wilson

Estate, Real Estate, Business, Banking & Finance, Oil & Gas
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  49 Years

Chad Lewis Taylor

Wills & Probate, Civil & Human Rights, Insurance
Status:  In Good Standing           

Jeffrey M. Strange

Lawsuit & Dispute, Estate, Divorce & Family Law, Business
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  14 Years

T. Keith Gould

Wills & Probate, Personal Injury, Medical Malpractice, Accident & Injury
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  28 Years

James V. Cann

Commercial Real Estate, Oil & Gas, Municipal, Corporate, Wills
Status:  In Good Standing           Licensed:  43 Years

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Free Help: Use This Form or Call 800-943-8690

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800-943-8690

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Lawyer.com can help you easily and quickly find Bridgeport Estate Lawyers and Bridgeport Estate Law Firms. Refine your search by specific Estate practice areas such as Estate Planning, Trusts, Wills & Probate and Power of Attorney matters.

LEGAL TERMS

CERTIFIED COPY

A copy of a document issued by a court or government agency guaranteed to be a true and exact copy of the original. Many agencies and institutions require certi... (more...)
A copy of a document issued by a court or government agency guaranteed to be a true and exact copy of the original. Many agencies and institutions require certified copies of legal documents before permitting certain transactions. For example, a certified copy of a death certificate is required before a bank will release the funds in a deceased person's payable-on-death account to the person who has inherited them.

SPECIFIC BEQUEST

A specific item of property that is left to a named beneficiary under a will. If the person who made the will no longer owns the property when he dies, the bequ... (more...)
A specific item of property that is left to a named beneficiary under a will. If the person who made the will no longer owns the property when he dies, the bequest fails. In other words, the beneficiary cannot substitute a similar item in the estate. Example: If John leaves his 1954 Mercedes to Patti, and when John dies the 1954 Mercedes is long gone, Patti doesn't receive John's current car or the cash equivalent of the Mercedes. See ademption.

AUGMENTED ESTATE

In general terms, an augmented estate consists of property owned by both a deceased person and his or her spouse. The concept of the augmented estate is used on... (more...)
In general terms, an augmented estate consists of property owned by both a deceased person and his or her spouse. The concept of the augmented estate is used only in some states. Its value is calculated only if a surviving spouse declines whatever he or she was left by will and instead claims a share of the deceased spouse's estate. (This is called taking against the will.) The amount of this 'statutory share' or 'elective share' depends on state law.

DEED OF TRUST

See trust deed.

MINERAL RIGHTS

An ownership interest in the minerals contained in a particular parcel of land, with or without ownership of the surface of the land. The owner of mineral right... (more...)
An ownership interest in the minerals contained in a particular parcel of land, with or without ownership of the surface of the land. The owner of mineral rights is usually entitled to either take the minerals from the land himself or receive a royalty from the party that actually extracts the minerals.

PREDECEASED SPOUSE

In the law of wills, a spouse who dies before the will maker while still married to him or her.

GRANT DEED

A deed containing an implied promise that the person transfering the property actually owns the title and that it is not encumbered in any way, except as descri... (more...)
A deed containing an implied promise that the person transfering the property actually owns the title and that it is not encumbered in any way, except as described in the deed. This is the most commonly used type of deed. Compare quitclaim deed.

INTESTATE SUCCESSION

The method by which property is distributed when a person dies without a valid will. Each state's law provides that the property be distributed to the closest s... (more...)
The method by which property is distributed when a person dies without a valid will. Each state's law provides that the property be distributed to the closest surviving relatives. In most states, the surviving spouse, children, parents, siblings, nieces and nephews, and next of kin inherit, in that order.

PROVING A WILL

Convincing a probate court that a document is truly the deceased person's will. Usually this is a simple formality that the executor or administrator easily sat... (more...)
Convincing a probate court that a document is truly the deceased person's will. Usually this is a simple formality that the executor or administrator easily satisfies by showing that the will was signed and dated by the deceased person in front of two or more witnesses. When the will is holographic -- that is, completely handwritten by the deceased and not witnessed, it is still valid in many states if the executor can produce relatives and friends to testify that the handwriting is that of the deceased.