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Greensides Law, a Professional Corporation, is an estate planning, probate, estate administration, trust administration, and litigation firm. We will advise you as to how to protect your family, distribute your assets, take care of others' assets when they are unable to do so themselves; and, if needed, we will go to court with you. We are committed to providing you with dedicated service.

We will include you as an active participant in your legal matter, offering frank and direct legal advice and advocacy services.
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Ian R. Greensides has been practicing law since 2004.
Ian has actively successfully defended and prosecuted many cases to trial, including several successful appeals.
As your attorney, he will provide you with the information to make your decisions based on the law and facts.
Ian recently served as Interim Executive Director of People Acting in Community Together (PACT), a community organizing non-profit that advocates for social and economic justice.
PACT fights for equity for tenants, affordable housing, justice system reform, and police accountability.
If you have a Trust, the Trust estate still needs to be administered, typically out of court, and although it is simpler procedurally to administer a Trust, there are still many items that will need to be accomplished.
These issues can be confusing or seemingly difficult, especially when a friend or family member can no longer handle their own affairs or are deceased.
Many clients wish to avoid probate because they may have heard advertisements or seminars that have presented information about how challenging probate can be.
The California Probate Code is the body of law that governs the protection of those who cannot take care of themselves and how their assets are passed upon their death.
This code section exists to protect us when we are weak or vulnerable and provides the rules that govern how our assets are passed and that our final wishes are respected.
The legal term used for when a person passed away without a Will is "intestate."
If the estate is worth more than $150,000 then the County Superior Court will need to oversee the administration of the estate.
The person appointed to handle the estate is called the "Administrator."
If there is a claimed unknown heir, unknown spouse, creditor, if you disagree with how the estate is being handled, you can file an objection, and you are entitled to a trial on the issue.
If you disagree with provisions of a Will, you must have "standing" to file a petition with the Court to object or to oppose an objection.
Interested persons can include heirs at law, a beneficiary under a prior Will, a beneficiary under a destroyed Will, an Executor, and a personal representative of the estate.
An heir can include a child, spouse, other relative, creditor, beneficiary, and any one else having a claim against the estate.
One way to contest a Will is if the maker of the Will did not have "testamentary capacity."
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