Estate Litigation

When a loved one passes, grief and legal complexity often arrive at the same time.

Wills that don't reflect what you were told. Executors who seem to be serving themselves. Money that moved out of accounts before or after death. Family members at odds over what was promised and what was written.

Estate litigation is what happens when the distribution of someone's life — their property, their accounts, their final wishes — becomes a legal dispute. These cases are deeply personal and rarely simple

“Red Flags” to look out for:

You should consider contacting an attorney, if you suspect or are dealing with any of the following:

  • A will you believe was signed by someone who lacked the mental capacity to do so, or who was being pressured by someone else;

  • An executor who is mismanaging estate assets, favoring certain heirs, or refusing to distribute property as the will directs;

  • Retirement accounts, bank accounts, or life insurance policies where the beneficiary designation was changed at a time when the decedent was incapacitated or being manipulated;

  • A power of attorney that you believe was misused — or where money disappeared while someone held control over another person's finances; or

  • A dispute over personal property that the executor is failing to divide properly or fairly.

Unfortunately these situations don’t resolve on their own. The longer they go unaddressed, the harder it becomes to recover what was lost or enforce what was rightfully owed.


Getting Started: What Happens First?

We start with two strategy sessions billed at $325/hour: the first to hear your situation in full, the second to present a clear plan of action.

Once you’re ready to move forward, I get to work. Depending on what your case calls for, that means reviewing the estate documents, reaching out to the adverse party, sending a formal demand letter, making calls or filing suit if litigation is what it takes.