Your Executor Duties: How to Inventory & Appraise a Decedent's Estate; Obtain Letters Testamentary; and Settle Claims, Debts, & Taxes (Series 300: Retirees & Estates) | List Price: $24.95

| Binding: Paperback
What a wonderful little book covering how an executor performs his or her duties in administering and settling a decedent's esta [Posted on 2006-12-25]
If you are going to be an executor or someone who has just died has named you to be an executor, then this book is for you. It is not a treatise on the subject, but it summarizes the basics regarding the tasks and responsibility you will be charged with when being an executor. Such tasks and responsibilities include tax, accounting and ministerial functions.
This book is comprised of 12 chapters:
1. Ease into Your Role as Executor
2. Take Charge after Death Certificate is Issued
3. Get Your Letters Testamentary
4. Administer the Estate Independently
5. Inventory and Appraisement
6. Estate Tax Form 706
7. Calculating the Gross Estate
8. Taking All Tax Deductions Allowed
9. The Marital Tax Deduction
10. Recapitulation and Tax
11. Fiduciary Tax Form 1041
12. Settle the Estate; Closing Matters
I particularly liked the following excerpt taken from the book's introduction:
"Too often, the role importance of an executor is misunderstood. The will-appointed person rushes off to an attorney, and dumps everything in the attorney's lap. This is a shirking of duty. It is also a gross error in judgment and a costly mistake."
This book is written so the reader will not shirk her dirty or make a gross error in judgment or a costly mistake. It talks about reading a will, doing what one must do to be granted Letters Testamentary, gather together the estate's assets, fill out the proper tax returns, make distributions to creditors and beneficiaries, and close the estate. The theory of the various tax returns are discussed here like I have seen in no other book covering the subject. Splendid job.
I would have liked the book better if there was a terms index in the back of the book. And I think the book would have been better if there had been an introductory chapter that overviewed the whole book and its subject matter.
In Chapter 2 there was a reference made to visit your public library to examine a copy of your state's Probate Code. I'm not sure this is practical advise in all states.
I particularly liked the summaries at the beginning of each chapter. And I liked the page numbering so it was easy to flip from chapter to chapter, ie. 1-1, 2-1, 3-1, etc.
With this book you should be armed to visit your county law library and be able to get whatever other information you see necessary to handle your duty as executor. This book cannot cover everything - so don't expect it to do so. But it is a worthwhile book to read. 5 stars!
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