The following was one of the PEA seminar series events.

This web-page is intended to archive the 6-page handout distributed at that event.

"Wills - Living and Otherwise - and Estates"

Tuesday, June 6, 2000, at noon

Prof. April Katz, Faculty of Law, will present this seminar.

April D. Katz became the Faculty of Law's first Law Co-op Director in 1989.
She practiced law with the Legal Aid Services Society of Manitoba in the 1970s and was the Donner Foundation Clinical Fellow at Osgoode Hall Law School in 1976-77.
In 1979, Ms. Katz became the first Prairie Regional Director for the Canadian Human Rights Commission, and became a partner in the firm of Oliver, Derksen.
She came to Victoria in 1981 as Chief of Compliance for the Human Rights Branch of British Columbia.
In 1984, Ms.Katz was appointed Secretary to the Legislation and Social Policy Committees of the British Columbia Cabinet, and in 1987 she began working with the Legal Services Branch of the Ministry of the Attorney General.

In addition to directing the Co-op Program, Ms. Katz teaches Advanced Legal Research and Writing, and the Law Co-op Preparation Course.

You can download the hand-out in your choice of three formats:

  1. as a web-page,
  2. as a MS Word document,
  3. as downloadable bit-maps (which you can print).

    Here are 6 hyperlinks to "bitmap" ('.bmp') files.

    Click on each hyperlink to download the file to your computer.

    Dependent on your computer, each page may be visible in your web-browser, or may be visible within the Microsoft Paint application, or may be downloaded to a folder on your computer's hard-drive. Hint: try "shift-click" to force a download.

    Depending on your web-browser, each page may appear as white text over a black background. or may print as such. (Any explanation for this will be welcomed.)

    Before trying to "print" each page on your printer, please use "page-setup" (within your web-browser or within MS Paint to reset the page-margins (top, bottom, left, right) to "zero" or to "minimal" values.

    1. page one
    2. page two
    3. page three
    4. page four
    5. page five
    6. page six

    Or, here is another copy of the same six pages, which have been "clipped" to have minimal top-margins and left-margins. These pages may print more nicely, if your computer's software and/or printer enforce page-margins.

    1. page one (clipped)
    2. page two (clipped)
    3. page three (clipped)
    4. page four (clipped)
    5. page five (clipped)
    6. page six (clipped)