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Intellectual Property
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Last Will And Testament
A will is a legal document that is written to guarantee that the money and belongings of the testator are left to people or organizations desired by him. Without a will, the estate can be subject to many problems. Relatives may also dispute over property, leading to lengthy court proceedings.
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Hurricane Season; Time for a Living Will
During the 2005 Atlantic tropical hurricane season 4500 United States citizens lost their lives due to hurricane Katrina and hurricane Rita. You never know when your time is up and here comes the 2006 Atlantic tropical hurricane season, which is said to be a very strong one.
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Living Wills
Living wills are documents that contain the wishes and desires of people regarding their medical treatment in the event of their being unable to correspond with their doctors and relatives due to incapacitation. Also known as advance health care directives, living wills are legal instruments that have been signed by witnesses and notarized. A living will is enforced when the medical experts are absolutely certain that there are no possibilities for the renewal or revitalization of a person's health and that death is sure to occur sooner or later.
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Advance Directives and Do Not Resuscitate Orders Explained
An advance directive outlines what wishes your doctor must follow if you become unable to make your own medical decisions. When you're admitted to the hospital usually the staff will ask you if you have an advance directive, or you can hand your doctor and hospital staff a copy yourself if they don't ask.
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Last Will And Testament Provision For Burial
A will or testament provides information about the transfer of property, ornaments or land, from the testator to his beneficiaries, after his death. Everyone, regardless of age, needs a will. Without a will people wouldn't know to whom their assets would go. A will is a general term and is used as the instrument in a trust, while testament applies only to dispositions of personal property.
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Have Your Parents Planned Their Estate For Your Protection?
When your parents die, you are the one who will be responsible for taking care of everything they leave behind. There are steps you can take today to make sure that it will be as easy for you as possible and that what you inherit will be as protected as possible.
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Why Should I Write A Will?
If you die without a Will (and statistics suggest that about 70% of UK citizens either have no Will, or that the Will they have is out of date or inadequate) those you leave behind will have a difficult time of it! A bereavement brings with it enough emotional and practical problems of its own to have financial and legal ones added to it.
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Last Will And Testament - What Happens If You Don't Make One?
Everybody knows it is important to make a Will, but most people put off making one of their own for a variety of reasons.
It just doesn't make sense why we would protect our loved ones all their lives, only to leave them to suffer when we die!
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Advanced Medical Directive for Terminal Patients - Terri Schiavo Case
How the Advanced Medical Directive can save a terminal patient life and make legal decisions. Briefly examines Terri Schiavo case. Why a living will, healthcare powers of attorney, healthcare proxies are not enough to save your life. When the Advanced Medical Directive is effective in medical care and Medicaid.
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Living Wills in Kentucky
If you become unconscious or too ill to communicate your own medical care decisions then the staff will follow your living will, which gives you a voice in the type of treatment you want. As long as you are able to express your own decisions, your living will cannot be used and you can verbally refuse or accept any medical treatment you want.
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Intellectual Property - Trade Marks - Distinctive Character Test - Landmark Decision
The recent decision by the European Court of Justice (“ECJ”) in Societ? des Produits Nestl? SA v Mars UK Ltd [2005], makes it easier for trade mark owners to satisfy the distinctive character test when applying for registration of their trade marks. The ECJ decided that the necessary distinctive character required for a trade mark registration can be acquired as a consequence of its use as part of another registered trade mark provided that an average, well-informed consumer would deem it to be distinctive of its trade origin.
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