Katkocin Law M Of Ronald
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Katkocin Law M Of Ronald
In each area, I spend the time necessary to understand fully your goals and desired outcome. At my office, you will receive legal guidance based on decades of experience, but with personal attention sometimes lacking at other larger law firms. Will contests and estate litigation, personal injury and contract litigation, commercial litigation, contract and business disputes and arbitration.

Business organizations, limited liability companies, close corporations, contract drafting and negotiation, and related matters. Wills, trusts, powers of attorney, living wills, probate releases, accountings, estate administration and more. I am attorney Ronald M. Katkocin. I founded Katkocin Law Office with the desire to offer highly effective legal solutions to individuals, families, and businesses throughout New Jersey.

My practice encompasses both transactional matters and litigation. Whether you need to draft a business contract, a living will or a trust, or settle a dispute by agreement, you can count on me for meticulous attention to detail.
Services
Estate planning and administration are areas of law that affect people of all ages and from all backgrounds.
Whether you want to ensure that your children will be provided for in the future or you have been appointed executor of a loved one's estate, clear legal counsel is key.
Turn to Katkocin Law Office in Medford, New Jersey.
I, attorney Ronald M. Katkocin, will meet with you personally and help you craft a customized estate plan that fits your unique needs.
With years of experience, I am also ideally equipped to assist you with probate and guide you through the complexities of the estate administration process.
Serving as executor of a deceased person's estate is an honor, but also a challenge.
An attorney can assist the executor with submitting the decedent's Last Will and Testament to the county Surrogate for probate.
Katkocin Law Office can help navigate the executor through the time-consuming and often complicated estate administration process.
An estate executor also must marshal the decedent's assets, pay the decedent's debts, and make distributions according to the decedent's Will.
If a beneficiary is a charitable organization, the executor may have to deal with the New Jersey Attorney General's Office if a charitable organization is a beneficiary under the Last Will and Testament.
Some people think the term "estate planning" is synonymous with a Last Will and Testament.
In fact, a Will is simply one tool to be used in a comprehensive estate plan.
These should be coordinated with life insurance and retirement account beneficiary designations, prenuptial agreements, and the proper titling of assets.
By working with your estate-planning attorney you can develop an estate plan appropriate for your unique set of circumstances to accomplish your ultimate goals.
For example, if many of your assets are contained in a retirement account, such as an IRA or a 401(k), you will want to make sure that the beneficiary designations on your account are coordinated with your Will because a beneficiary designated to receive IRA money upon your death will receive that money even if your Will provides differently.
Your Last Will and Testament is one of the basic elements of estate planning.
If you die without having made a Will, then your assets will pass under the laws of intestacy.
In other words, the law, and not you, will determine who gets your property, whether it is real property like your home or personal property like your money.
Of course, how you own your property may play a part in who receives your property upon your death.
For this reason, your Will is only one part of your estate plan, albeit an important part.
A living will, sometimes referred to as an "advanced health care directive, " is the instrument through which you inform your family and health care givers of your wishes with respect to your care if you are unable to do so yourself.
These wishes often include directives of what health care providers should do or should not do under various circumstances.
In New Jersey, your Living Will may be a combination of advanced health care directives and medical decision power of attorney.
For example, Katkocin Law Office can help you set forth in one instrument your specific wishes about medical treatments, pain medications, and other procedures that you may or may not wish, and you also can appoint an agent to act on your behalf if necessary or appropriate.
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