Legacy Law Firm - June 2024

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You Can’t Take It With You

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June 2024

When I first started practicing law some 20 years ago, I wisely decided to listen to my clients. You told me how quickly time flies, especially when raising children. Because of this, I make a concerted effort to regroup, recharge, and spend time with family at least twice a year. I find the best vacations take me to places I’ve never been and go in directions I never saw coming. Going Somewhere New When our kids were younger, we always vacationed at the beach. Year after year, we returned to Cherry Grove. While it was a beautiful place to play in the ocean, golf, and spend time with family, it became repetitive. So, I was thrilled when the kids got older and began asking to visit new places. Since then, we’ve closed the firm the last week of June and the first week of July to go on summer vacations as a family. We’ve been on awesome adventures, including the Grand Canyon, Mt. Rushmore, and Niagara Falls. Adventure Awaits Setting Out on Unforgettable Vacations

A Question to Ask (or Answer for) a Loved One Asking and answering important questions helps preserve your family’s values and life lessons for generations to come. What’s the one thing you want people to remember about you?

We stretched our dollars as much as possible, and while we didn’t have all the creature comforts, those early trips were some of the most fun and memorable. A great example was our honeymoon in the Florida Keys. There’s only one road in and out of there (US 1), and each business, restaurant, and house is located by mile marker. As we explored the Keys together, we kept a list of each mile marker we stopped at and what we did. We only chose our hotels ahead of time. Everything else was played by ear. We met a lot of locals, stumbled into all kinds of “holes in the wall,” bought fresh seafood right off the boat, and grilled it over an open fire. Of course, unplanned endeavors have their downsides, too. I wandered into someone’s living room one night, trying to find a bed and breakfast. Fortunately, the man in the recliner politely told me where to find it — typical of the laid-back attitude in the Keys. Maybe it’s because I’ve gotten older. But these days, I prefer flying to driving and would rather sleep in a comfortable bed than save a few bucks.

Still, as summer approaches, I get excited to go somewhere new and look forward to making memories, the best of which always come from the unexpected things that happen along the way.

Delightfully Different Experiences When I was younger, I didn’t want to go on the perfect vacation — where everything was planned out in detail — but instead one full of surprises. Laurie and I used to plan our road trips with an atlas … before GPS took the fun out of getting where you were going. We’d circle our destination and map our route on paper, highlighting different towns, cities, landmarks, and attractions we might want to check out along the way. But only the destination was set in stone.

Philip J. Corson, Founder

“The Lord will protect you now and always wherever you go.” – Psalm 121:8.

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HERO HUSKY SAVES THE NEIGHBORHOOD

On Dec. 15, 2023, pet owner Chanell Bell of Philadelphia was taken aback when she noticed that Kobe, her 4-year-old miniature Alaskan husky, had dug a hole in her home’s front yard. This was a stark departure from Kobe’s usual behavior, which Bell initially dismissed as boredom and promptly refilled the hole. However, when Kobe began to dig again in the same spot, Chanell realized something was amiss. “We’ve been here at our home for a while now, and he never digs holes,” Bell told USA Today. “So, I knew something was up.” She investigated further, reviewing footage from the family home’s security camera overlooking Kobe’s newfound digspot. Then, she witnessed Kobe sniff the air around the area before digging the hole in the same spot again.

Thinking something Kobe smelled must have alarmed him, Bell phoned Philadelphia Gas Works, which sent a crew out to investigate. The engineers discovered that the gas lines beneath the Bell household were old, dilapidated, and beginning to leak. After fixing the issue, the company told Bell that if Kobe had not discovered the leak, the line would have posed significant health and safety concerns for the whole neighborhood. “They told me something as simple as a light switch turning on could’ve caused an explosion,” Bell told USA Today. After Bell shared Kobe’s story on social media, it caught the attention of PETA, the People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, who awarded the young husky the Heroic Dog Award. Inspired by Kobe’s efforts, Bell wrote a children’s book dedicated to him called “The Dog That Saved the Block Before Christmas.”

Maximize Your Legacy With a Living Trust A Pathway to Financial Security and Peace

Estate planning empowers individuals to maintain control over their legacy and provide for their families, offering peace of mind and a sense of security for the future. It ensures you control how you want your assets handled during your lifetime and after you pass. A revocable living trust is one of the most influential aspects of an estate plan. If you do not already have an estate plan, it’s time to create one, as it is never too early to start! A trust is like a bucket — you can put property into it and control everything while you are still alive. A trust involves three important

players: the grantor, the trustee, and the beneficiary. The grantor creates the trust, the trustee controls everything inside the trust, and the beneficiaries will receive allocations from the trust according to the wishes of the grantor (you). As the grantor and living trustee, you have control over everything you put into the trust, such as your home, cars, household items, life insurance policies, etc. After you pass away, the trust still exists, but the person you named as the successor trustee will control and distribute its contents to the beneficiaries you specify. Probate is a timely and costly public process no one wants; however, by establishing a trust, you can avoid it entirely and keep your affairs private. Start by creating a will and then, with the help of a properly trained attorney, transition to creating a trust. An attorney can ensure you fund the trust correctly, retitling property and other assets so the trust (and you, as the grantor and trustee) owns them. This is a crucial part of creating a trust: You must fund it, which is a separate process. Because a trust allows you to bypass probate, your heirs will enjoy an efficient, private, and straightforward path to honoring your wishes instead of slogging through a lengthy and potentially contentious probate process while grieving. It’s one of the most generous and magnanimous gifts you can give them — and the best way to secure your wealth for the next generation.

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DINING SOLO

TAKE A BREAK

A WOMAN’S RIGHT TO EAT ALONE

ADVENTURE CAMPING FATHER GEMINI HIKING JUNETEENTH PARK PICNIC PRIDE SANDALS SUNBURN SWIMMING

Did you know that a little over a century ago, women could not eat alone in restaurants? If they did, people would assume the woman was, let’s say, “looking for work,” and she would be disgraced, and so would the restaurant. So, women who wanted to dine alone or with other women would be turned away. Women needed to be accompanied by a man to eat out in public. How did this finally change? After being denied a ticket to a dinner event because of her gender, a journalist named Jane Cunningham Croly took action. Croly was an English- born American journalist who wrote and advocated for equal rights and economic independence for women. Croly also founded and was the first president of the Women’s Press Club of New York. One of Croly’s biggest advocacy groups was a women’s dinner club named Sororis. The women of Sororis held their first official meeting in April 1868 at a New York restaurant called Delmonico’s to protest the ban on women’s solo dining. They demanded service, and Delmonico’s agreed, making it the first establishment in U.S. history to allow women to dine without a male chaperone. When World War I began, more women entered the workforce, earning them increased independence. New restaurants and lunch counters started to open that would serve working women, and gradually, dining without a man became commonplace. Progress was slow, though; even as recently as 1970, some restaurants still barred solo women from entering. Thankfully, in today’s society, this would never fly!

SUMMER CHICKEN SALAD

Ingredients

Inspired by FoodNetwork.com

Dressing • 3/4 cup crumbled feta cheese • 1/2 cup half and half • 1/4 cup mayonnaise • 1/4 cup sour cream • 1 tsp sugar • Juice of 1 lemon

• 3 boneless, skinless chicken breasts • Salt and pepper • 4 ears of corn, shucked • 3 tbsp minced dill

• 3 stalks celery, finely diced • 1 red onion, finely diced • 1 1/2 cups blueberries • 1 head of butter lettuce

Directions 1. Place chicken in a large plastic bag and pound with a mallet to flatten to 1/4-inch thickness. Drizzle with olive oil and sprinkle with salt and pepper. 2. Heat grill, then grill chicken on both sides for about 4 minutes per side; set aside to cool before slicing. 3. Grill corn until the kernels begin browning, turning regularly for even cooking. Use a knife to shave the kernels off. 4. In a bowl, mix all dressing ingredients until combined. 5. In a large bowl, combine corn, dill, celery, and onions, then stir in chicken and top with dressing and blueberries as desired. 6. Separate the head of butter lettuce into “cups” to fill with salad and enjoy!

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INSIDE THIS ISSUE

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The Thrill of Open-Ended Trips

How a Pet Husky Prevented Disaster

Using a Trust for Wealth Preservation

3

Summer Chicken Salad

The History Behind Women Eating Alone in Restaurants

Steiner’s Emotional Road to Olympic Glory

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Olympian Steiner Overcame Adversity to Win Gold FROM TRAGEDY TO TRIUMPH

In June 2007, just one year before the 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics, an SUV traveling on the wrong side of the road hit 22-year- old Susann Steiner — wife of German Olympic weightlifter Matthias Steiner — while she was driving. She was rushed to the hospital, and it was there that Matthias promised her he would win a gold medal in her honor. Tragically, Susann died as a result of her injuries, but Matthias’ promise to his late love lived on. Wanting to make his wife proud, Matthias trained harder than ever before. He had been lifting weights since he was just a teenager, and though he had won medals and championships before, he had never claimed the ultimate prize: an Olympic medal. Matthias also had to compete in the super heavyweight category against the strongest weightlifters in the world. Among his competitors were the formidable Russian

Evgeny Chigishev, an Olympic veteran and champion, and the Latvian Viktors Scerbaiths, who won the silver medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens. “Weightlifting is a sport without mercy [and] it is very tough to make progress,” Matthias said in an interview with the Olympic Channel. “Every time you touch the bar, you realize that you are always alone in weightlifting, the weights are getting heavier and heavier, everything hurts.” But Matthias was not alone. His memory and dedication to Susann inspired him to attain strength he never imagined possible. As it turned out, he needed every ounce of his strength to claim victory. The competition was incredibly close. Matthias’ victory was not secure until the last lift; he needed to clean and jerk an astounding 569 pounds — more than he had ever lifted before — to fulfill his promise.

Photo: Dacoucou

Incredibly, he succeeded. He edged out Chigishev by 1 kilogram, winning the gold medal with a score of 461 against Chigishev’s 460. After he had completed his lift, he fell to his knees in tears. At the podium, he held his gold medal and a bouquet of roses in his right hand and clutched a picture of Susann in his left. Matthias honored Susann’s memory with his gold medal victory, exactly as he promised.

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