Tuesday, March 22, 2016

POLST Empowers Patients in Healthcare Decisions

POLST Empowers Patients in Healthcare Decisions

Talking about your wishes in a chronic illness or at the end of life is a conversation that can be awkward, difficult and for some of us, one we would rather avoid. But it’s a conversation you must have as an important and necessary part of good medical care. You have the right to participate fully in all your healthcare decisions, and this becomes especially important near the end of life.

New Jersey now has a new resource to make your preferences known called Practitioner Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment, or POLST. POLST is a medical order form that details your wishes regarding life-sustaining treatment. POLST forms currently are used in 42 states, and Gov. Chris Christie signed New Jersey's POLST law in December 2011.

The form is intended to be completed jointly by you and your physician or an advanced practice nurse (APN). You can modify your POLST at any time. To access New Jersey’s POLST form, go to www.njha.com/POLST.

Your healthcare team wants to understand your wishes and goals of care, and filling out the POLST form is one of the easiest and simplest ways to do this. POLST can help you make meaningful personal choices regarding your care, and your instructions will be honored across all care settings including emergency medical services, hospitals and nursing homes.

You should have a POLST form if you are:
  • Seriously ill with a life-limiting advanced illness
  • Frail and weak and have trouble performing routine daily activities
  • Afraid of losing the capacity to make your own healthcare decisions in the near future
  • Living in a nursing home or hospice.

Educate yourself by talking with your doctor or APN about your options, and then discuss your choices with your family. How do you want to live your life in the time you have left? How much do you want to know about your illness and how much does your family know about your priorities and wishes? What are your goals in the next year or so? These are all issues you need to consider as you determine your treatment options. Having a completed POLST form also will allow you to make known any personal, cultural or spiritual practices related to your care. Your quality of life during this time should be totally under your control.

POLST complements an Advance Directive and does not totally replace that document. You may still need an advance directive to appoint a legal healthcare administrator. It is recommended that all adults have an advance directive regardless of their health status. If there is a conflict between the documents, the  most current document will be followed. (more)

POLST can help you enhance your personal liberty at the end of life, and it empowers you to make a clear statement about the type of medical services you will receive among your end-of-life care. It's up to you to take the initiative and express your wishes, and POLST will help you do just that. Talk with your doctor or advance practice nurse about POLST.






Friday, March 11, 2016

South Brunswick Library Wills & Power of Attorney Seminar March 21, 2016


Wills & Power of Attorney Seminar South Brunswick Public Library
110 Kingston Lane Monmouth Junction, NJ 08852
March 21, 2016 at 7:00PM
SPEAKER: Kenneth Vercammen, Esq. Edison, NJ 
(Author- Answers to Questions About Probate) The NJ Probate Law made a number of substantial changes in Probate and the administration of estates and trusts in New Jersey.
Main Topics:
1. The New Probate Law and preparation of Wills          
2. 2016 changes in Federal Estate and Gift Tax
3. NJ Inheritance taxes on estates over $675,000
4. Power of Attorney
5. Living Will 
6. Administering the Estate/ Probate/Surrogate 
7. Questions and Answer
COMPLIMENTARY MATERIAL: Brochures on Wills, "Answers to Questions about Probate" and Administration of an Estate, Power of Attorney, Living Wills, Real Estate Sales for Seniors, and Trusts.    
South Brunswick Public Library 732-329-4000 Can’t attend? We can email you materials Send email to VercammenLaw@Njlaws.com
Free Will Seminars and Speakers Bureau for Groups 10 years ago the AARP Network Attorneys of the Edison/Metuchen/Woodbridge area several years ago established a community Speakers Bureau to provide educational programs to AARP and senior clubs, Unions and Middlesex County companies. Now, Ken Vercammen, Esq. and volunteer attorneys of the Middlesex County Estate Planning Council have provided Legal Rights Seminars to hundreds of seniors, business owners and their employees, unions, clubs and non-profit groups.
About the speaker: Kenneth A. Vercammen is a trial attorney in Edison, NJ. He is co-chair of the ABA Probate & Estate Planning Law Committee of the American Bar Association Solo Small Firm Division. He is a speaker for the NJ State Bar Association at the annual Nuts & Bolts of Elder Law & Estate Administration program. He is author of the American Bar Association’s book Wills and Estate Administration. Mr. Vercammen is an AARP member and has published over 150 legal articles in national and New Jersey publications on litigation, elder law, probate and trial topics. He is a highly regarded lecturer on litigation and probate law for the American Bar Association, NJ ICLE, New Jersey State Bar Association and Middlesex County Bar Association. His articles have been published in noted publications included New Jersey Law Journal, ABA Law Practice Management Magazine, and New Jersey Lawyer. He established the NJlaws website www.njlaws.com which includes many articles on Estate Planning, Probate and Wills. He is a member of the AARP and often lectures to groups on the importance of an up to date Will, Power of Attorney and Living Will.
KENNETH VERCAMMEN & ASSOCIATES, PC ATTORNEY AT LAW 2053 Woodbridge Ave.Edison, NJ 08817 (Phone) 732-572-0500 (Fax) 732-572-0030 www.njlaws.com www.CentralJerseyElderLaw.com

Friday, March 4, 2016

Wills & Power of Attorney Seminar Piscataway Library Kennedy Branch March 10 at 7pm

Wills & Power of Attorney Seminar 
Piscataway Library Kennedy Branch
500 Hoes Lane Piscataway NJ 08854
March 10 at 7pm

SPEAKER: Kenneth Vercammen, Esq. Edison, NJ
(Author- ABA’s “Wills and Estate Administration book”)

The new NJ Probate Law made a number of substantial changes in Probate and the administration of estates and trusts in New Jersey. 
Main Topics:
1. The New Probate Law and preparation of Wills
2. 2016 changes in Federal Estate and Gift Tax 
3. NJ Inheritance taxes on estates over $675,000
4. Power of Attorney
5. Living Will
6. Administering the Estate/ Probate/Surrogate
7. Questions and Answer

COMPLIMENTARY MATERIAL: Brochures on Wills, "Answers to Questions about Probate" and Administration of an Estate, Power of Attorney, Living Wills, Real Estate Sales for Seniors, and Trusts.
Piscataway Library Kennedy Branch
Register at the Kennedy Library Information Desk or by calling 732-463-1633x6
http://www.piscatawaylibrary.org/content/wills-estates
Can’t attend? We can email you materials Send email to VercammenLaw@Njlaws.com

Free Will Seminars and Speakers Bureau for Groups
10 years ago the AARP Network Attorneys of the Edison/Metuchen/Woodbridge area several years ago established a community Speakers Bureau to provide educational programs to AARP and senior clubs, Unions and Middlesex County companies. Now, volunteer attorneys of the Middlesex County Estate Planning Council have provided Legal Rights Seminars to hundreds of seniors, business owners and their employees, unions, clubs and non-profit groups. These quality daytime educational programs will educate and even entertain. Clubs and companies are invited to schedule a free seminar. The following Seminars are now available:

Details on the 2 programs currently offered:
1. WILLS & ESTATE ADMINISTRATION- PROTECT YOUR FAMILY AND MAKE PLANNING EASY

2. POWER OF ATTORNEY to permit family to pay your bills if you are temporarily disabled and permit doctors to talk with family

All instructors are licensed attorneys who have been in practice at least 25 years. All instructors are members of the American Bar Association, New Jersey State Bar Association, and Middlesex County Bar Association. All programs include free written materials.
You don't have to be wealthy or near death to do some thinking about a Will. Here is your opportunity to listen to an experienced attorney who will discuss how to distribute your property as you wish and avoid many rigid provisions of state law.
Topics discussed include: Who needs a Will?; What if you die without a Will (intestacy)?; Mechanics of a Will; Selecting an executor, trustee, and guardian; Proper Will execution; Inheritance Taxes, Estate Taxes "Living Will"; Powers of Attorney; $14,000 annual gift tax exclusion, Bequests to charity, Why you need a "Self-Proving" Will and Estate Administration/ Probate.
Sample materials: Hand-outs on Wills, Living Wills/Medical Advance Directive, Power of Attorney, Probate and Administration of an Estate, Real Estate, Working with your Attorney, Consumers Guide to New Jersey Laws, and Senior Citizen Rights.

SPEAKERS BUREAU
At the request of senior citizen groups, unions, and Middlesex County companies and organizations, the " Speakers Bureau " is a service designed to educate citizens about how laws affect their lives and how the judicial system operates. We have attorneys available to speak to businesspersons, educational, civic and social organizations on a wide range of topics during business hours.

HELP YOUR MEMBERS LEARN THE LAW, PREVENT OR AVOID LEGAL PROBLEMS
Chances are many of your members have been in a situation where they could have benefited from legal advice. Have you ever been in an accident? Has a motor vehicle or criminal complaint ever been filed against you or a member of your family? Many individuals face these and other types of problems. Often people do not protect their rights, only to later face lengthy license suspensions or even jail for failure to resolve legal problems early on. That's why Legal Rights Seminars are offered.
This means your members can get advice and possibly prevent legal problems before they occur. Most importantly, they can have peace of mind.
Americans need an attorney when legal problems strike. As in the case of medical services, early treatment can prevent catastrophe and its attendant cost in time and money. For example, psychological studies have demonstrated that there is a direct correlation between legal problems and lost work time and productivity. Employees' work performance often has a direct relationship to personal legal problems. Therefore, the sooner a solution can be found for the employees' problems, the sooner employees can focus on their work.
In today's complex world, few people can function successfully and safely without competent legal advice. In order to insure your estate plans are legally set up, you need to know exactly where you stand so that you can avoid possibly catastrophic mistakes impacting both you and your family. For additional information on the Legal Seminars, contact our Coordinator, Kenneth Vercammen’s law office at (732) 572-0500, email VercammenLaw@njlaws.com or fax 732-572-0030.

About the speaker: Kenneth A. Vercammen is a trial attorney in Edison, NJ. He is co-chair of the ABA Probate & Estate Planning Law Committee of the American Bar Association Solo Small Firm Division. He is a speaker for the NJ State Bar Association at the annual Nuts & Bolts of Elder Law & Estate Administration program. He is writing a book for the ABA on Wills and Estates.
He was Editor of the ABA Estate Planning Probate Committee Newsletter. Mr. Vercammen has published over 150 legal articles in national and New Jersey publications on litigation, elder law, probate and trial topics. He is a highly regarded lecturer on litigation and probate law for the American Bar Association, NJ ICLE, New Jersey State Bar Association and Middlesex County Bar Association. His articles have been published in noted publications included New Jersey Law Journal, ABA Law Practice Management Magazine, and New Jersey Lawyer. He established the NJlaws website www.njlaws.com which includes many articles on Estate Planning, Probate and Wills. He is a member of the AARP and often lectures to groups on the importance of an up to date Will, Power of Attorney and Living Will.


KENNETH VERCAMMEN & ASSOCIATES, PC
ATTORNEY AT LAW
2053 Woodbridge Ave.
Edison, NJ 08817
(Phone) 732-572-0500
(Fax) 732-572-0030
www.njlaws.com
www.CentralJerseyElderLaw.com

Thursday, March 3, 2016

Challenger to Will must prove undue influence IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF KATHRYN PARKER BLAIR, DECEASED.

Challenger to Will must prove undue influence
IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF KATHRYN PARKER BLAIR, DECEASED.
Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.
A-5482-13T1.
Decided February 1, 2016.

NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION

PER CURIAM.
Petitioner Lori Ann Parker appeals an April 29, 2014 order that dismissed her verified complaint. In that complaint petitioner sought a declaration that a will executed by her aunt, Kathryn Parker Blair ("decedent"), and probated by the Surrogate Court be set aside because, among other reasons, decedent signed the will as the result of undue influence and also lacked the requisite testamentary capacity. Petitioner also appeals the June 24, 2014 order denying her motion for reconsideration. We affirm both orders.
On June 25, 1987, decedent executed a will that provided her estate would pass equally to her siblings but, if a sibling predeceased her, that sibling's share would pass to his or her surviving children. The petitioner's father was one of decedent's siblings. He died in 2002. On October 11, 2012, decedent executed a new will in which petitioner was not named as a beneficiary. Two days later, decedent, then eighty years of age, died of ovarian cancer.
The new will was probated on October 24, 2012. On July 17, 2013, petitioner filed a verified complaint seeking to have the executor, who is one of decedent's siblings, show cause why the probate of the new will should not be vacated. In the alternative, petitioner sought a declaration that, among other things, the probated will was the product of undue influence and decedent lacked the testamentary capacity to execute such will and, thus, the will should be set aside. The court denied the order to show cause, and discovery ensued on the remaining relief sought in the verified complaint.
Petitioner filed a motion for summary judgment seeking to have the court grant the remaining relief in her complaint. Petitioner failed to provide a copy of the notice of cross motion, but we discern from the record decedent's estate sought to have the complaint dismissed on the grounds the substantive claims asserted in the verified complaint were devoid of merit but that, in any event, the complaint was time-barred under Rule 4:85-1. The court heard both motions after the time for discovery expired.
The court denied petitioner's motion and granted the estate's cross motion for summary judgment, and dismissed the complaint. In her motion petitioner had asserted decedent lacked the mental capacity to sign the will because at the time she was dying from cancer, in chronic pain, and on pain medication. The court found petitioner failed to set forth any evidence to support a claim of testamentary incapacity, see Matter of Will of Liebl260 N.J.Super. 519, 524-25 (App. Div. 1992), noting she failed to produce an expert's report to support the premise that either decedent's illness, the pain she was experiencing, or the effects of the pain medication affected decedent's cognition.
Moreover, the estate came forward with evidence decedent had the mental capacity to sign the will. One of decedent's close friends certified she visited decedent in the hospital on an almost daily basis after decedent was diagnosed with cancer in August 2012. The friend consistently found decedent — including the moment she signed the will — to be stable, strong willed, focused, and rational. Another close friend certified decedent was his "best friend;" in fact they spoke daily during their twelve-year friendship before decedent's death. He stated that long before her death, decedent told him of her intentions to disinherit some of her nieces and nephews. He characterized her as a highly intelligent, practical, strong-willed, focused, and "no-nonsense" person. In September 2012 he visited decedent daily and observed that, although enervated due to her illness, she still possessed the aforementioned characteristics. The court also noted that neither one of these friends stood to gain anything under the new will. Finding petitioner failed to present any competent evidence decedent lacked the requisite testamentary capacity to execute the will, the court dismissed this claim.
Petitioner also contended the executor under the 2012 will exerted undue influence over decedent and wrongfully induced her to sign the will. The court found no evidence in support of such contention. The executor had never been in a confidential relationship with decedent and there were no suspicious circumstances surrounding the execution of the will, two elements that must be found to raise a presumption of undue influence. See In re Estate of Stockdale196 N.J. 275, 302-03 (2008). The petitioner's proof there was a confidential relationship between the executor and decedent was that the executor had signed documents pertaining to decedent's medical treatment. However, not only did such fact fail to establish the existence of a confidential relationship, but also the executor testified at his deposition that he only signed such documents after decedent had read them and requested that he sign them on her behalf, a point petitioner did not refute.
The court rejected petitioner's contention of undue influence, characterizing petitioner's claim as nothing more than "non-corroborated conjecture." Moreover, the only change under the new will that affected the executor was that he was appointed to this position. In addition, there was unrefuted evidence petitioner had scant contact with decedent in the years preceding her death; in fact, petitioner had not had any contact with decedent during the last six years of her life. Accordingly, the trial court dismissed petitioner's claim of undue influence from the complaint. Petitioner argued there were other deficiencies in the execution of the will, which included that the person who obtained the letters testamentary was an imposter and that there were grounds to remove the executor. The trial court rejected these remaining claims for the reasons set forth in a written opinion accompanying the April 29, 2014 order, which denied petitioner's motion for summary judgment, granted the estate's cross motion for summary judgment, and affirmed the probate of the new will.
Petitioner filed a motion for reconsideration alleging, among other things, that the estate's cross motion for summary judgment merely sought to dismiss her complaint on the limited ground the complaint had not been timely filed pursuant to Rule 4:85-1 and was thus time-barred. The court denied that motion, finding the arguments raised in the estate's brief in support of its cross motion for summary judgment were not confined to whether the complaint was timely filed. The thrust of the estate's brief was not merely that summary judgment be denied but also that the entire complaint be dismissed because petitioner's substantive claims lacked merit. Further, during oral argument on the estate's cross motion for summary judgment, the estate argued reasons other than the timeliness of the filing of the complaint in support of its motion without objection by petitioner. Certainly nothing impaired petitioner from responding to each argument raised in the estate's brief in her reply to the cross motion.
On appeal, petitioner argues:
POINT I: THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN DENYING THE PLAINTIFF'S SUMMARY JUDGMENT MOTION AND MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATIONA. KATHRYN DID NOT HAVE LEGAL CAPACITYB. HARRY PARKER, THE EXECUTOR, ENGAGED IN UNDUE INFLUENCE1. HARRY PARKER WAS IN A CONFIDENTIAL RELATIONSHIP WITH KATHRYN2. KATHRYN WAS IN A WEAK, VULNERABLE, AND DEPENDENT STATE3. SUSPICIOUS CIRCUMSTANCES SURROUNDED THE 2012 WILLPOINT II: THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN NOT REMOVING HARRY PARKER, SR. AS THE EXECUTORA. HARRY EDWARD PARKER, SR. IS NOT HARRY EDWARD PARK, JR.B. HARRY PARKER DID BREACH HIS FIDICIARY DUTYPOINT III: THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN GRANTING THE DEFENDANT'S SUMMARY JUDGMENTA. THE ONLY ISSUE THE DEFENDANTS RAISED WAS THE TIME-BAR ISSUEB. THE DEFENDANTS' CROSS-MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT WAS UNTIMELY
When reviewing a trial court's decision on a motion for summary judgment, we apply the same standard of review as the trial court. W.J.A. v. D.A.210 N.J. 229, 237-38 (2012). First, we determine whether the moving party has demonstrated there were no genuine disputes as to any material fact, and then we decide whether the court's application of the law was correct. Atl. Mut. Ins. Co. v. Hillside Bottling Co.387 N.J.Super. 224, 230-31 (App. Div.), certif. denied, 189 N.J. 104 (2006). In so doing, we view the facts in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. Brill v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of Am.142 N.J. 520, 523 (1995). However, we accord no deference to the trial court's conclusions of law, Estate of Hanges v. Metro. Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co.202 N.J. 369, 382-83 (2010), which we review de novo. Dep't of Envtl. Prot. v. Kafil395 N.J.Super. 597 (App. Div. 2007).
Here, we find insufficient merit in the arguments petitioner raises to warrant further discussion in a written opinion. R.2:11-3(e)(1)(E). After carefully reviewing the record and the applicable legal principles, we affirm both orders under review substantially for the reasons set forth in Judge Menelaos W. Toskos' written opinions dated April 29, 2014 and June 24, 2014.
Affirmed.