www.facilityaxs.net - FacilityAXS.net
Announcements / News / Press Release

Probate Richmond County

Professional Services
Staten Island, New York, 10312

See Phone Number
MAKE A CONNECTION Probate Richmond County is accepting messages: Send Message

Contact Information

Type of Listing
Company
Company Name
Probate Richmond County
Phone Number
See Phone Number
Location
49 Adlai Cir ground floor
Staten Island, New York, 10312
United States
Postal Code
10312

Social Media Links

Company Details

Hours of Operation
9 am - 9 pm every day
Accepted Forms of Payments
All cc, cash

Write About You And Your Company

Fact: The probate filing fee typically costs around $350. However, you are looking at around 5 percent of the estate for the whole probate process.

We are a multi-service firm committed to delivering top-tier probate services to private clients and businesses. We can help meet our clients’ probate property needs, regardless of the size of the estate, the location, industry, or the legal matter. Our goal is to make your probate process easy through the provision of a single, coordinated experience.

Our probate property lawyer practices exclusively – probate. The team is fully committed to making your probate journey fast and easy, which means you are in for a seamless experience.

The first question we usually ask ourselves when a client comes into our offices is whether probate is needed. We handle this process in four steps as below:

As a local probate property lawyer, it is ideal that the process is systematic. We try and determine how the property of the decedent was owned at the time of death. Property held in joint tenancy with rights of survivorship, trusts transferred to a trust when the decedent was alive are instances where the beneficiary receives the property regardless of what the will says.

When the property is owned in a contingent plan, then the contingent owner will get the property when the owner passes away. Some of the common properties that have this arrangement are life insurance policies. Normally, the contingent owner gets the property no matter what the will stipulates.