no-nonsense Wills and Estates lawyers in Brunswick and preston
Wills & Estates Lawyers
We are no-nonsense wills lawyers who talk straight with our clients. We charge fairly and we have the experience to give good advice.
Our legal services are high quality, our advice is clear, and we are transparent with costs. Our clients have direct access to their lawyer, not just their assistant.
We are a reliable established firm in the Northern suburbs offering a practical and direct approach to the practice of law. Each of our lawyers works exclusively in one practice area and comes to our firm with substantial experience.
Our clients can expect to:
With offices in Brunswick and Preston, we advise and represent clients in estate disputes, contested wills, probate applications, estate planning, preparation of wills & powers of attorney, guardianship applications, and estate administration.
Our substantial experience in challenging and contesting Wills means makes us well placed to prepare incontestable Wills for our clients. For instance, in 2021 we sucessfully challenged a Will at a trial in the Supreme Court (the Court overturned the deceased’s Will – read the case here).
Jason Falzon, senior Wills and Estates Lawyer, heads our Estates Department. With over 7 years’ Estates Law experience, he gives good advice, talks straights with his clients and is firm with his adversaries. He charges his clients fairly and is honest about their case prospects, strategies and costs.
We have a proven record of contesting wills on behalf of beneficiaries treated unfairly and those excluded altogether. Similarly, a Will we have made has never been successfully contested.
Jason regularly assists testators to prepare wills and estate plans. He also represents executors to obtain grants of probate and to defend estates from unmeritorious claims.
A power of attorney (‘POA’) is a legally binding document signed by a person (‘the Principal’) giving another person (‘the Attorney’) control over the Principal’s financial, personal, and legal affairs. Importantly, a Principal can only sign a POA while they have decision making capacity.
Unfortunately POAs are often invalid for technical reasons. Banks and other institutions will not accept an invalid POA. If the Principal loses decision making capacity before the Attorney discovers the invalidity, it is too late to make a new POA.
An Attorney with an invalid POA will need to apply to VCAT for a determination about who controls the Principal’s affairs. If more than one person wants control, the dispute becomes costly and protracted.
We recently successfully defended a contested Power of Attorney in VCAT (read the case here)
VCAT usually holds multiple hearings and appoints the Office of the Public Advocate to investigate. The parties and their lawyers often also obtain medical reports, subpoena witnesses, and make written submissions for VCAT’s consideration.
Many of these disputes could have been avoided if the POA had been properly prepared.
Preparing a Will is one of the most important documents you can prepare during your lifetime. Without a Will your estate will be distributed in accordance with legislation, and you will likely leave behind a great deal of stress for your loved ones at an otherwise difficult time whilst they cope with your passing.
A will is a document prepared by the will maker (‘the testator’) directing an executor how to distribute the testator’s estate after their death. The terms of a will are often successfully contested, usually by one or more family members of the deceased testator. Reasons for contesting a will include:
Most wills and estate disputes resolve by negotiation prior to Court proceedings. Disputes that proceed to Court are costly to the estate, which usually pays the parties’ legal costs.
The cost, length and outcome of a dispute will often reflect the skill, experience, and attitude of the lawyers involved. Jason Falzon is an experienced negotiator who will talk straight with you. He is also in regular communication with some of the most competent barristers in the field.
We have successfully both contested and defended numerous Wills (read our successfull 2021 Supreme Court case judgment here).
“In the absence of clear and satisfactory proof, the court cannot be satisfied that the deceased knew and approved of the contents of the Will.” – Judge McMillan, 17 May 2021