AV Preeminent Peer Rated Attorneys
Coaldale Residents, consider several factors when selecting a lawyer including their experience, expertise, and reputation. AV Rated Attorneys represent a distinguished group of lawyers who have received top ratings from their peers for their exceptional ethical standards and an A grade (4.5 or higher).
AV Preeminent Peer Rated Attorneys
Coaldale Residents, consider several factors when selecting a lawyer ... Learn More
AV Preeminent Peer Rated Attorneys
Coaldale Residents, consider several factors when selecting a lawyer including their experience, expertise, and reputation. AV Rated Attorneys represent a distinguished group of lawyers who have received top ratings from their peers for their exceptional ethical standards and an A grade (4.5 or higher).
  • Serving Canon City, CO

  • Law Firm with 2 lawyers2 awards

  • Providing Southeastern Colorado with quality legal services for more than 40 years

  • Estate Planning LawyersCivil Litigation, Business Organization, and 6 more

Teagan Boda
Estate Planning Lawyer
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  • 718 Main St., Canon City, CO 81215-1540

  • Westcliffe, CO 81252-1122

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  • 303 North Seventh Street, Suite 201, Canon City, CO 81215-1040

  • 831 Royal Gorge Boulevard, Suite 329, Canon City, CO 81215-0889

  • 1415 Main St., Ste. A, Canon City, CO 81212-3997

  • 211 East Front Street, Florence, CO 81226

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Looking for Estate Planning Lawyers in Coaldale?

Estate planning attorneys help individuals prepare for the management and distribution of their assets after death or incapacitation. They create legal documents such as wills, trusts, powers of attorney, and healthcare directives. Their work ensures a client’s wishes are honored, minimizes potential taxes, and simplifies the process for their loved ones.

About our Estate Planning Lawyers Ratings

The average lawyer rating is created by peers based on legal expertise, ethical standards, quality of service, and relationship skills. Recommendations are made by real clients.

CLIENT RECOMMENDED
52 %

47 Client Reviews

PEER REVIEWS
4.5

20 Peer Reviews

Commonly Asked Estate Planning Questions From Users Near You

This information is not legal advice and is not guaranteed to be correct, complete or up-to-date. It is provided for general informational purposes only. If you need legal advice you should consult a licensed attorney in your area.

Can my siblings force me to sell the house our parents left us that is under my name?

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Answered by attorney Kathleen Delacy (Unclaimed Profile)
Estate Planning lawyer at Reger Rizzo & Darnall, LLP
If your name is on the deed no one can force you to sell. If all names, you can buy their share from them at fair market value but if you cannot afford to pay them you may be forced to sell and give them their share.
If your name is on the deed no one can force you to sell. If all names, you can buy their share from them at fair market value but if you cannot afford to pay them you may be forced to sell and give them their share.
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Can I set up living trusts in two separate states?

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Answered by attorney Victor L. Waid (Unclaimed Profile)
Estate Planning lawyer at Law Office of Victor Waid
Yes, although it is suggested you see an estate planning attorney to help you accomplish your objectives.
Yes, although it is suggested you see an estate planning attorney to help you accomplish your objectives.

Who is the next of kin of the deceased if spouse had been separated from him and living in different state for 15 years now?

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Answered by attorney Richard Joseph Keyes (Unclaimed Profile)
Estate Planning lawyer at Probate Law Center Richard J. Keyes, PC
In Missouri, not his wife as she has abandoned him. Here is the statute: *Inheritance and statutory rights barred on misconduct of spouse. * 474.140. If any married person voluntarily leaves his or her spouse and goes away and continues with an adulterer or abandons his or her spouse without reasonable cause and continues to live separate and apart from his or her spouse for one whole year next preceding his or her death, or dwells with another in a state of adultery continuously, such spouse is forever barred from his or her inheritance rights, homestead allowance, exempt property or any statutory allowances from the estate of his or her spouse unless such spouse is voluntarily reconciled to him or her and resumes cohabitation with him or her.
In Missouri, not his wife as she has abandoned him. Here is the statute: *Inheritance and statutory rights barred on misconduct of spouse. * 474.140. If any married person voluntarily leaves his or her spouse and goes away and continues with an adulterer or abandons his or her spouse without reasonable cause and continues to live separate and apart from his or her spouse for one whole year next preceding his or her death, or dwells with another in a state of adultery continuously, such spouse is forever barred from his or her inheritance rights, homestead allowance, exempt property or any statutory allowances from the estate of his or her spouse unless such spouse is voluntarily reconciled to him or her and resumes cohabitation with him or her.
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