Lowe’s and Home Depot have made DIY (Do It Yourself) projects a household name. Easy directions, helpful advice, and available materials make building a shed, planting a garden, or fixing the plumbing within reach of the average lay person. Of course, we never hear of DIY brain surgery or DIY root canals. Why then do many folks think DIY estate planning is a good idea?
"I therefore take this opportunity to highlight a cautionary tale of the potential dangers of utilizing pre-printed forms and drafting a will without legal assistance. As this case illustrates, that decision can ultimately result in the frustration of the testator’s intent, in addition to the payment of extensive attorney’s fees [spent interpreting the will]—the precise results the testator sought to avoid in the first place."
Many attorneys actively educate clients and the general public against DIY estate planning; others, however, view such DIY estate plans as job security. When a person drafts his or her own estate planning documents, or relies on pre-printed forms, the money saved on the front end is often spent ten times over on the back end. Expensive fixes of badly drafted DIY wills and trusts are best avoided by using experienced trusts and estates attorneys at the outset.
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