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South Carolina Bar Al Todd Estate Planning Workshop

InterActive Legal is a proud sponsor of the 2023 South Carolina Bar Al Todd Estate Planning Workshop. This advanced level program is designed for experienced estate planners and tax attorneys. Be sure to stop by InterActive Legal’s exhibit booth to meet our Regional Sales Consultant, Lisa Briley, and learn about our comprehensive planning and drafting systems for estate planning and elder law planning attorneys. Lisa will show you how InterActive Legal can help grow your practice and help you spend less time drafting and more time engaging with clients.

Closely Held Business Buy-out Arrangements Should be Reviewed Immediately in Light of the Recent Connelly Case

Practitioners should inform clients with buy sell redemption agreements about the recent Connelly v. IRS, No. 21-3683 (8th Cir. 2023) that held that corporate owned life insurance had to be included in the value of the company. This recent case requires that buy-sale agreements, buy-out agreements, ownership of life insurance to be used in buyouts must all be reviewed.

Creating and Using Custom Profiles – the Best Drafting Tool in your Practice System

If you've listened in to any of the InterActive Legal training classes or previous subscriber drafting webinars, you may recall hearing someone say that creating custom profiles is the most efficient way to use the program. And this is accurate - the best tool in the program, regardless of which practice system you have, is the custom profile. But what exactly are profiles, and how can they be customized? How many can you have? Can you edit them? What happens when the program is updated? All of these questions - and more - will be answered in this hour-long session, in which we will create and use several custom profiles.

Drafting Joint Revocable Trusts (including new Community Property Trusts) in InterActive Legal

All InterActive Legal drafting systems include a Joint Revocable Trust, which operates as one combined estate planning document for a married couple or unmarried partners.  As a revocable trust, this document also is intended for incapacity planning, and includes provisions for managing trust assets for the benefit of the grantors (and later the surviving grantor) during lifetime, as well as provisions for disposing of property at each spouse’s death.  Because this document includes the estate plan for two separate individuals, it includes some drafting options that differ from those in a standard (one-grantor) revocable trust or last will and testament.

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