Whaley Estate Litigation
High Net Worth Guide 2024
Whaley Estate Litigation
Share profile
About
Whaley Estate Litigation Partners (WEL Partners) is a Toronto based Trusts & Estates Litigation boutique practicing exclusively in estates, trusts, and related matters throughout Ontario. WEL Partners advises Estate Trustees, Trustees, Attorneys, Guardians and Fiduciaries on their duties and obligations arising both at common law and legislatively. WEL Partners focuses on opinions, dispute resolution, litigation and mediation of estate, trust and related matters including related issues of undue influence, decisional capacity, fraud, forgery, suspicious circumstances and technical breaches respecting testamentary instruments.
Founding Partner: Kimberly A. Whaley, CS, TEP, LLM
Partner: Bryan Gilmartin
Partner: Nima Hojjati
Counsel: Professor Emeritus Albert H. Oosterhoff
Will, Estate & Trust Disputes
Advising Fiduciaries
Dependant’s Support Claims
Passing of Estate, Trustee, Attorney, Guardian & Fiduciary Accounts
Capacity Proceedings
Guardianships
Power of Attorney Disputes
Consent & Capacity Board Proceedings
End-of-Life, Treatment Decisions & Medical Assistance in Dying
Elder Law / Elder Financial Abuse
Solicitor’s Negligence
Representation of Persons Under Disability
Probate Applications
Opinions
Appeals
Agency Services
Approval Motions Under Rule 7
WEL Partners
45 St. Clair Avenue West, Suite 600
Toronto, ON, M4V 1K9
https://welpartners.com/
https://welpartners.com/blog/
WEL Partners publishes a monthly Newsletter featuring commentary, articles and news related to Estate & Trust Litigation. Sign up for our Newsletter: https://bit.ly/3y0hciW
Ranked Offices
Provided by Whaley Estate Litigation
- Toronto45 St. Clair Ave. West, Suite 600, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M4V 1K9
- View ranked office
Whaley Estate Litigation rankings
Articles, highlights and press releases
1 item provided by Whaley Estate Litigation
The title to this blog may surprise. After all, a trust is a trust, no? Well, yes and no. In the first place, just because you call something a trust does not necessarily make it one.
The title to this blog may surprise. After all, a trust is a trust, no? Well, yes and no. In the first place, just because you call something a trust does not necessarily make it one.