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Wills
We prepare LaSalle wills that appoint estate trustees, name beneficiaries, address property, and set out clear estate instructions.
LaSalle Wills And Power Of Attorney Lawyer
Goldstone Law PC helps LaSalle individuals, couples, parents, homeowners, retirees, business owners, and families prepare wills, continuing powers of attorney for property, personal care POAs, and updated estate documents.
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A short intake is often the fastest way for our team to point you in the right direction and follow up with clear next steps.
How We Help
We help clients document estate wishes, appoint trusted decision-makers, address property and family concerns, and prepare for incapacity with clear authority.
LaSalle wills and powers of attorney help clients prepare for estate administration, property decisions, retirement planning, family support, and personal care. A will can name an estate trustee, identify beneficiaries, deal with gifts, and explain how property should be distributed. Powers of attorney can give trusted people authority during lifetime if help is needed with banking, investments, real estate, housing, health, or care decisions.
Goldstone Law PC helps LaSalle clients prepare documents that fit their family and asset picture. Some clients are planning around a home, retirement savings, insurance, adult children, and a spouse. Others may need to consider a rental property, business interests, a blended family, aging parents, or children who live outside the community.
We begin by reviewing the full picture. Homes, mortgages, registered accounts, pensions, insurance, debts, joint ownership, business records, and beneficiary designations can all affect the plan. The will should coordinate with assets that pass outside the estate, while powers of attorney should be practical for banks, advisors, care providers, and family members who may need to rely on them.
The people appointed should be chosen for judgment and availability. Estate trustees may need to arrange tax filings, communicate with beneficiaries, maintain or sell property, and distribute assets. Attorneys for property may need to pay bills, manage accounts, keep insurance active, and sign documents. Personal care attorneys should understand health, housing, and support preferences.
Our work includes wills, continuing powers of attorney for property, powers of attorney for personal care, updates to existing documents, and guidance on signing and storage. We also help clients organize account lists, property records, insurance details, and advisor contacts. The goal is a LaSalle planning package that reduces uncertainty and gives trusted people a clear path.
We also discuss how family members will find the right information quickly. Clear storage notes, advisor contacts, property files, insurance details, and account lists can make the documents easier to use when decisions are time-sensitive.
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We prepare LaSalle wills that appoint estate trustees, name beneficiaries, address property, and set out clear estate instructions.
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We prepare continuing powers of attorney for banking, investments, homes, debts, bills, and financial decisions.
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We prepare personal care powers of attorney for health, housing, care, support, and day-to-day personal decisions.
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We update documents after home purchases, family changes, executor changes, retirement, business changes, or new planning concerns.
What To Watch For
LaSalle planning may involve homes, mortgages, insurance, registered accounts, pensions, investments, and family savings.
Personal care appointments should reflect health, housing, support preferences, and trusted people who can communicate well.
Where children or decision-makers live elsewhere, practical access to documents and records should be considered.
How It Works
We review family, property, investment, and business details, discuss appointments, prepare documents, and explain signing and storage.
Step 1
We discuss family, property, accounts, debts, existing documents, business interests, and planning goals.
Step 2
We help consider estate trustees, attorneys, alternates, guardianship wishes, and beneficiary instructions.
Step 3
We prepare wills and powers of attorney tailored to your instructions.
Step 4
We explain signing requirements, storage, copies, and when documents should be updated.
We prepare estate and incapacity planning documents for clients with homes, savings, retirement assets, family responsibilities, business interests, and trusted decision-makers.
LaSalle clients may need documents that address homes, retirement savings, adult children, aging parents, blended family concerns, and trusted decision-makers.
We help clients prepare wills and powers of attorney that are practical for banks, care providers, family members, and the people appointed to act.
Clear Instructions
Clear planning can make it easier for loved ones to understand who can act, what records matter, and what wishes should guide them.
Common Questions
Yes. The plan should review property, registered accounts, insurance, pensions, debts, and beneficiary designations.
It is often useful because it names who can make health, housing, and care decisions if you cannot.
Yes, but communication, travel, and access to records should be considered.
Yes. Older documents should be reviewed after family, property, health, retirement, or relationship changes.
They can plan together, but each person needs their own documents and instructions.
They can be noted, but family should also know the wishes because timing can be immediate.
Account lists, property records, insurance, debts, tax records, and advisor contacts are helpful.
We prepare wills and POAs, explain appointments, review planning details, and guide signing and storage.
Ontario Coverage
Goldstone Law PC supports clients across Ontario, including:
Next Step
Legal support is now more accessible and straightforward than ever. Our team guides you through every step with clarity, confidence, and care.