Shafae Law

Shafae Law

Shafae Law is a boutique law firm providing comprehensive estate planning, trust, estate, probate, and trust administration services located in the San Francisco Bay Area.

What Needs to Happen When Someone Dies?

After a client has designed their estate plan, the most common question we get, by an overwhelming margin, is some form of “What needs to happen when someone dies? How does someone execute this estate plan we have created?”

Notice

When someone dies, there usually isn’t an alert that goes out to your loved ones, your banks, your employer, your utility companies, your credit card companies, etc. Well, unless you’re a celebrity. But for us non-celebrities, the news of one’s death trickles out organically. Loved ones handle the deceased’s remains and any rituals–funeral, memorial, wake, spiritual ceremony, etc. Sometime from a week up to a month and a half after the death, the county produces a death certificate. With the death certificate, the decedent’s loved ones begin to notify all interested parties and organizations of the decedent’s passing.

Knowledge

When the decedent’s loved ones are emotionally and psychologically ready, they begin to piece together what they can about the decedent’s life. This will include discovering the assets and debts of the decedent, obtaining control over any digital accounts and assets (like social media and cloud accounts), as well as determining whether the decedent had an estate plan. Hopefully, the decedent alerted the people involved in their estate plan as to the location of the estate planning documents. That’s not always the case, so sometimes this step may involve a bit of a “wild goose chase” for the documents.

Administration

Once it is determined whether there is an estate plan, steps are taken to administer the estate. There are two main routes of estate administration:

Only a Will, or no estate plan

If no estate plan is discovered, or the decedent only had a will, then the decedent’s estate must go through the probate process. Read our prior post about what probate entails. Our office can be retained to assist the loved ones guide the decedent’s estate through probate if there is only a will, or no estate plan at all.

Estate plan with a living trust

If the decedent died having created an estate plan built upon a living trust, then the administration of their assets is handled privately by way of trust administration. Trust administration is often quicker and less expensive than probate administration. The person named as the successor trustee of the living trust is tasked with carrying out the terms of the trust, along with providing notices required by law, marshaling and valuing assets, paying any debts and expenses, and distributing the remaining assets following the terms of the distribution provisions of the trust.

To assist them, the successor trustee can hire an attorney (like our office, for example!) to represent them in carrying out their duties. Trust administration can differ greatly from one trust to another. Also, trust administration varies greatly whether the decedent was married and survived by a spouse versus being unmarried or the second spouse to die. Trust administration can be handled by attorneys whether or not the attorneys drafted the estate plan.

If you lost a loved one, contact us to schedule a complimentary initial consultation to figure out next steps.


➤ LOCATION

1500 Old County Road
Belmont, California 94002

Office Hours

Monday - Thursday
9AM - 5PM

☎ Contact

info@shafaelaw.com
(650) 389-9797