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MacElree Harvey, Ltd.

MacElree Harvey, Ltd.

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  • Our Team
        • Joseph A. Bellinghieri
        • Patrick J. Boyer
        • Jeffrey P. Burke
        • Robert A. Burke
        • Matthew C. Cooper
        • John C. Cronin
        • Daniel T. Crossland
        • Marie I. Crossley
        • Harry J. DiDonato
        • Jaycie DiNardo
        • Caroline G. Donato
        • Lindsay A. Dunn
        • Sally A. Farrell
        • Brian J. Forgue
        • William J. Gallagher
        • Patrick J. Gallo, Jr.
        • Mary Kay Gaver
        • J. Charles Gerbron, Jr.
        • Leo M. Gibbons
        • Joseph P. Green, Jr.
        • Carolina Heinle
        • Court Heinle
        • Frank W. Hosking III
        • Katherine A. Isard
        • J. Kurtis Kline
        • Peter E. Kratsa
        • Mary E. Lawrence
        • Daniel R. Losco
        • Michael G. Louis
        • Jamison C. MacMain
        • John F. McKenna
        • Matthew M. McKeon
        • Brian L. Nagle
        • Lance J. Nelson
        • Timothy F. Rayne
        • Michael C. Rovito
        • Duke Schneider
        • Tiffany M. Shrenk
        • Andrew R. Silverman
        • Ashley B. Stitzer
        • Robert M. Tucker
        • Natalie R. Young
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    • Centreville, DE
    • Hockessin, DE
    • Kennett Square, PA
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Joseph A. Bellinghieri

Elder Law

February 6, 2015 by Hoppel Design

Elder law focuses on the needs of families and individuals as they age. These needs can include assistance in arranging at-home care, placement in a long-term care community such as an assisted living facility (or personal care home) or a skilled nursing home, representation in a guardianship, and guidance through the complicated maze of Medicare, Medicaid, and Veterans benefits.

Medicaid Planning

Medicaid planning is the assistance provided to a potential Medicaid applicant in advance of, and in preparation for, their application for Medicaid. Generally Medicaid planning becomes an issue for seniors when there is a need for long-term or nursing home care. Nursing homes are extremely expensive, with the average cost of a nursing home in Pennsylvania being over $11,000 per month, and in Delaware over $12,000 per month. Many seniors do not have the income and/or resources necessary to cover these high nursing home costs, especially when there is a healthy spouse still living at home. Seniors therefore will generally rely on their lifetime of accumulated assets to cover the high nursing home costs. The nursing home’s expensive costs can understandably exhaust a couple or individual’s assets rather quickly.

Medicaid planning affords a Medicaid Applicant the opportunity to protect their lifetime of hard-earned resources. Medicaid planning encompasses a complex, and time intensive process involving identification and collection of asset documentation, and strategic protection of assets which in many cases will be a complete re-structure of the applicant’s financial assets.

In many instances a Medicaid applicant will require the legal and financial expertise of an attorney who focuses in the area of Elder Law and Medicaid planning. Families will engage an Elder Law attorney in order to ensure the best possibility of acceptance into the Medicaid program.

Veterans Pension Benefits

We believe that all veterans of the United States Military deserve an advocate. We assist those war time veterans with medical and financial need in obtaining benefits to which they are entitled by virtue of their sacrifice and service.

In order to pursue VA benefits, an attorney must be accredited to practice before the Veterans Administration. Our firm’s VA accredited attorneys have a track record of succeeding in the VA claims process as a result of our unrelenting and dedicated skill. Our unique success is based upon our individualized approach to each and every veteran’s particular situation.

If you would like to schedule a consultation, please call the firm at 610.436.0100 or submit the contact request form.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Estate Planning

February 6, 2015 by Hoppel Design

Estate planning is an essential step in ensuring that your family will handle your health and financial affairs the way you would like them to be handled, in the event of your absence or death. Whether it be due to death, illness or incapacity, the following documents are necessary in order for your wishes to be carried:

  1. Will
  2. Revocable Intervivos Trust (“Living Trust”)
  3. Durable Power of Attorney
  4. Health Care Power of Attorney (“Living Will”)
  5. Tangible Personal Property Memorandum
  6. Beneficiary Designations of Life Insurance/Retirement Assets

Will

A Will is a document that outlines how you want your assets to be distributed, and it appoints a person (the “Executor” or “Personal Representative”) who will make sure that your intentions are carried out upon your death. A Will is a legal document and it should be crafted by a lawyer trained to assist you in clearly identifying and outlining your intentions with respect to the appointment of a guardian for your minor children, and possibly establishing trusts which you may wish to establish at death for minor and/or incapacitated persons, or in cases where you simply want to protect your assets for a future period after your death for the benefit of one or more beneficiaries. A carefully drafted and artfully crafted Will can also implement tax planning and tax savings techniques. A Codicil is a legal amendment to an existing Will.

Revocable Intervivos Trust (“Living Trust”)

A Revocable Trust serves as a valuable supplement to a Will in certain cases.  A person (the “Grantor”) contributes certain assets to the trust, or directs that the assets will be placed in the trust upon his death, but the person retains the right to revoke the trust and reclaim ownership of the trust assets at any time during his/her lifetime.  Trust assets are not subject to probate, and pass directly to the beneficiaries of the trust in accordance with the provisions of the trust document.

Durable General Power of Attorney

A Durable Power of Attorney enables you to appoint a person as your attorney-in-fact/agent, to act for you in a limited or a general capacity with very few, if any, restrictions.  Such a document, which is governed by state law, is a critical part of everyone’s estate plan, and it ensures that your agent will be empowered to handle all of your affairs until such time as you may wish to revoke or change the Durable General Power of Attorney. It is considered a “durable” document in that it endures a disability, so it is effective even if you become incapacitated. Without such a document, your family would have to petition a court to have a guardian appointed for you.

Health Care Power of Attorney (“Living Will”)

A Health Care Power of Attorney enables you to appoint someone to be in charge of making any and all decisions relating to your health, medical treatment, life sustaining treatment, etc. should you not be in a condition to make those decisions yourself. Such a document addresses the application of life sustaining procedures in the event of certain medical conditions, such as a persistent vegetative state and/or an end-stage medical condition. Sometimes a Health Care Power of Attorney/Medical Directive is called a “Living Will. This document is an essential part of everyone’s estate plan because it enables family members and/or close friends to know your intentions with respect to what type of treatment you want in the event you cannot communicate your wishes on your own.

Tangible Personal Property Memorandum

This is a separate document that is referenced in a Will and that enables you to direct the disposition of certain items of “tangible personal property” to a beneficiary of your choosing. Tangible personal property includes assets such as furniture, clothing, jewelry, collections, antiques, automobiles, etc., but not real estate, cash or other financial assets.

Beneficiary Designations on Life Insurance/Retirement Assets

Assets such as life insurance and retirement accounts have a contingent arrangement known as a “beneficiary designation”, which enables the owner to direct how he/she wishes these particular types of assets to be distributed upon death. Many times, people do not understand that what they state in such a beneficiary designation supersedes the provision of their Will, so it is critical that the primary and contingent beneficiary designations on life insurance and retirement assets are carefully crafted so as to coincide with and be compatible with the estate plan outlined in the Will, unless the person makes a conscious decision to provide for beneficiaries who are different from those beneficiaries named in their Will. In recent years, “Transfer on Death” beneficiary designations have become more prevalent with respect to non-retirement investment assets, and other accounts held at financial institutions. It is critical that any such “Transfer on Death” designation be analyzed and crafted, after first reviewing the plan outlined in a person’s Will, so as not to create an unintended result where the beneficiaries in the Will and the designation are not the same. For example, if you leave everything in your Will to a trust for the benefit of your minor children, but you have a beneficiary designation that simply names your minor children as the primary beneficiary of a particular asset (without mentioning the trust), then the children will receive the asset upon attaining the age of majority, even if the Will provides that they should not receive their inheritances until a later age.

Important Definitions:

Administrator

Person or institution appointed by the Orphans’ Court to manage the estate assets where no executor has been designated, or where the designated executor is unable or unwilling to serve.

Beneficiary

Person named in a Will or Trust to receive assets from the maker of the Will or Trust.

Decedent

Person who has died.

Executor (male)/Executrix (female)

Person or institution appointed in a Will, and thereafter appointed by the Orphans’ Court, to administer, manage and distribute a decedent’s estate in accordance with the terms of the Will. May also be referred to as a “Personal Representative”.

Grantor

Person who establishes a Trust. Also referred to as the “Trustor” or “Settlor”.

Intestate Heir

Person entitled to receive an asset under applicable state law, in the absence of a Will or Trust. If a person dies without a Will, he/she is deemed to have died “intestate”.

Personal Representative

Synonymous with the terms Executor or Administrator (see above).

Settlor

Trustor; Grantor. Alternate term for one who establishes a Trust.

Successor Trustee/Substitute Trustee

The Trustee who “takes over” upon the death, disability or resignation of the original Trustee or a prior Trustee.

Testator (male)/Testatrix (female)

Person who makes a Will.

Trustee

One who holds legal title to Trust assets, and also manages and distributes those assets in accordance with the terms and conditions of the Trust document. A Trustee may be an individual, or a bank, trust company or financial institution licensed to serve as a Trustee. A Trust may have one or more Trustees (Co-Trustees) who act together.

Trustor

One who establishes a Trust. The terms “Grantor” and “Settlor” are synonyms for “Trustor”.

If you would like to schedule a consultation, please call the firm at 610.436.0100 or submit the contact request form.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Tax Law

February 6, 2015 by Hoppel Design

Tax Law

MacElree Harvey’s tax lawyers provide tax advice on a wide variety of personal, business and real estate matters, as well as thoughtful and experienced representation in obtaining rulings and other guidance from tax authorities and in resolving tax controversies.

We pride ourselves on providing well-thought-out advice in a manner that is timely, efficient and reflects our clients’ business objectives. The knowledge and experience of each tax lawyer is not limited to just the tax department, but is made available firm wide through close collaboration and cooperation across practices groups.

For taxpayers engaging in business and real estate transactions, success depends on compliance with a diverse and ever-evolving array of tax rules. Tax regulations and policies are constantly changing, and often vary widely in different national, regional, and local jurisdictions. A thorough understanding of the tax regulations can mean the difference between profitable transactions and harsh penalties.

MacElree Harvey provides comprehensive and strategic tax planning advice, combining a thorough knowledge of complex tax laws with a pragmatic problem-solving approach to our clients’ tax issues. We serve corporations, private equity funds, family businesses, individuals, partnerships, limited liability companies, and non-profits in a wide variety of transactions ranging from routine corporate formations to complex mergers and acquisitions. Our goal is to maximize after-tax results for our clients within applicable laws and regulations.

MacElree Harvey’s tax attorneys provide thoughtful and experienced advocacy on behalf of clients in federal, state and local tax disputes. We represent clients at all stages of the administrative process, from audit through administrative appeal and post–appeals mediation. We also represent clients in a wide range of tax collection matters, from initial assessment through enforced collection means (liens and levies).

MacElree Harvey’s Tax Controversy lawyers have an in-depth understanding of tax matters arising in controversies affecting a broad array of industries, including the financial products, hedge fund, manufacturing, transportation, entertainment, and utility industries. Likewise, we have significant experience with many of the issues on which the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and state and local taxing authorities currently focus their resources. On the federal side those include debt/equity issues, the determination of ownership of property, capital versus expense classifications, losses from trading in securities and commodities, economic substance and business purpose, and placed-in-service date disputes. We have also handled cases involving tax shelters, accounting methods, and promoter registration. With respect to state and local controversies, our experience extends to a wide range of income, capital, and transactional tax issues.

We routinely advise clients on state and local tax planning matters, including entity selection, operational flow, and the tax consequences of acquisitions, reorganizations, and divestitures. Our lawyers have handled tax controversies in state courts and administrative proceedings.

We advise our not-for-profit clients on a broad range of matters including general tax issues, tax-exempt financing, securing and maintaining recognition of tax-exempt status, issues regarding payments to grantees (including foreign organizations), corporate governance, restructuring and bylaws issues, contract negotiations, employment issues, donor issues, real estate transactions, land use and local government issues, and the substantive areas of law with which the client is involved.

We have extensive experience in representing our nonprofit client in an application for real estate tax exemption, or defending our client when an existing tax exemption is changed or challenged. We have represented clients before tax assessment boards, tax courts, courts of general jurisdiction and have successfully negotiated tax settlements and payment in lien of tax (“PILOT”) agreements for our nonprofit and charitable clients.

Below are some of the forms that we prepare for clients:

  • Form 1040 – Individual tax return
  • Form 1041 – Fiduciary tax return
  • Form 1065 – Partnership tax return
  • Form 1120 – Corporate tax return
  • For 1120 S – S Corporation tax return
  • Form 990  – Foundation tax return
  • Form 5227 – Split Interest Trust tax return
  • Form Fin Cen 114 – Foreign Bank reporting form
  • Form 1040 NR – Non Resident individual tax return
  • Form 1023 – Application for Recognition of Exemption Under 501 (c) (3)

ATTORNEYS

Joseph A. Bellinghieri

Harry J. DiDonato

Carolina Heinle

Court Heinle

J. Kurtis Kline

Jamison C. MacMain

Duke Schneider

Andrew R. Silverman

OFFICES

West Chester, PA

ARTICLES

Taxation of Foreign Investment in Delaware Entities

Post-Mortem Estate Planning

Taxation of Foreign Investment in Delaware Entities

The Pennsylvania Tax Benefit Rule Compared to the Federal Rule

ALL PRACTICE AREAS

  • Banking & Finance Law
  • Business and Corporate Law
  • Criminal Defense Law
  • Employment Law
  • Estates & Trusts Law
  • Family Law
  • Litigation Law
  • Mediation and Arbitration
  • Personal Injury Law
  • Real Estate & Land Use Law
  • Tax Law

If you would like to schedule a consultation, please call the firm at 610.436.0100 or submit the contact request form.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Estates & Trusts Law

January 29, 2015 by Hoppel Design

Estates & Trusts Law

MacElree Harvey estate planning attorneys are committed to helping clients protect, preserve and control their assets during their lives, even if they become disabled.

Our estate lawyers also work with clients to help them implement a plan which will pass on their estates to loved ones in the manner they want – while minimizing the cost of Federal Estate, State Inheritance and Federal Estate Income taxes.

Estate and Trust Litigation, Guardianship and Orphans’ Court Procedures

Our attorneys represent executors, beneficiaries, banks, family business partnerships, trust companies and non-profit organizations. Not only does the area of estate litigation involve decedents’ estates and trusts, but also matters involving financial disputes concerning minors’ estates. The attorneys often interpret wills, trust documents and non-profit corporate articles of incorporation.

The estate litigation department often, and with increasing frequency, refers matters to private alternative dispute resolution. In matters involving family disputes, it is often desirable for the families to resolve their differences in a non-courtroom setting. However, in matters such as surcharge actions or Petitions to Remove Executors, our attorneys are well versed in the special Orphans’ Court rules established for disputes in the Court of Common Pleas of Pennsylvania.

There is also an increase in fiduciary liability cases. These are matters that often deal with self-dealing and fraud issues when a Power of Attorney, Trustee or Executor/Administrator of an estate is defending or prosecuting actions of wrongful taking from the entities that they have been charged to financially oversee. These matters typically involve accountings, surcharge actions and actions to assess liability and damages.

PRACTICE AREAS

Elder Law

Estate Planning

Guardianships

ATTORNEYS

Joseph A. Bellinghieri

Robert A. Burke

John C. Cronin

Daniel T. Crossland

Sally A. Farrell

William J. Gallagher

Carolina Heinle

Court Heinle

Frank W. Hosking III

Daniel R. Losco

Jamison C. MacMain

John F. McKenna

Duke Schneider

Tiffany M. Shrenk

OFFICES

Centreville, DE

Hockessin, DE

Kennett Square, PA

West Chester, PA

ARTICLES

Post-Mortem Estate Planning

ALL PRACTICE AREAS

  • Banking & Finance Law
  • Business and Corporate Law
  • Criminal Defense Law
  • Employment Law
  • Estates & Trusts Law
  • Family Law
  • Litigation Law
  • Mediation and Arbitration
  • Personal Injury Law
  • Real Estate & Land Use Law
  • Tax Law

If you would like to schedule a consultation, please call the firm at 610.436.0100 or submit the contact request form.

Filed Under: Primary

Business and Corporate Law

January 29, 2015 by Hoppel Design

Business and Corporate Law

Businesses need lawyers who not only know the law but who also understand their business.

Our business law practice places an emphasis on small and mid-market companies. We build strong relationships with our clients so we understand their goals and challenges and can act as a trusted legal and business advisor. Our business attorneys help clients in Southeastern Pennsylvania and Northern Delaware find reasonable and practical solutions to business and legal problems.

Starting at formation and through the lifecycle of a business, we provide comprehensive and knowledgeable advice on numerous issues facing small to mid-market companies. Our team of attorneys will assist with entity formation, hiring and terminating employees, confidentiality and non-compete issues; drafting shareholder, partnership and operating agreements; and a wide variety of business and commercial contracts. Our business attorneys regularly handle complex business matters including governance issues, strategic planning, executive compensation, negotiating and structuring financing, transition, continuity and succession planning, and liquidity events such as sales or mergers.

To ensure our clients get the best representation possible, where appropriate, our business team that works closely with other MacElree Harvey lawyers, drawing on the skills and experience of lawyers in the areas of commercial litigation, taxation, estate, and succession planning, real estate, employment, finance, insolvency, collections, and restructuring.

Representative Areas of Service:

  • Business Formation
  • Transactions and Transitions
  • Family Businesses
  • Professional Practices

Business Formation

MacElree Harvey has helped hundreds of new businesses get their start. We assist clients in the start-up phase with the critical first steps to establish their businesses. We listen to our clients’ objectives, in order to understand the nature of their business, taking into consideration liability concerns, tax ramifications, management and ownership structures, financial issues, and other issues specific to their business.

Throughout every stage of a client’s business, we encourage an eye to the future. Our goal is to build long-term relationships with our clients, tailoring our legal services to their business as it grows and develops.

Transactions and Transitions

MacElree Harvey aims to simplify the legal process and provide affordable, high-quality corporate law services so our clients can stick to what they do best while we handle the compliance, contractual and other legal concerns. We assist owners and boards of directors maintain their operations and foster growth while avoiding legal and regulatory pitfalls. Our attorneys regularly handle complex business matters related to governance, transitions and transactions, strategic planning, raising financing, and offering new services or products. Our attorneys also advise clients on transfers of technology and intellectual property, as well as trademarks, copyrights, and licenses. As our clients’ businesses expand and change, we approach each transaction with financial considerations and long-term strategic plans in mind. Our attorneys listen to the clients’ objectives before aggressively pursuing their interests in any transaction.

Unfortunately, not all business ventures end harmoniously. A “business divorce” involves issues of control, ownership, and distribution of property, as well as potential payments. These business decisions are often accompanied by high-stakes conflict and intense emotions. Our attorneys lend a depth of experience in negotiation and strategic unwinding of a business. When necessary, we work with our litigation group to resolve disagreements as part of the business divorce process.

Family Businesses

MacElree Harvey has worked closely with generations of family business owners and executives. We understand that an owner’s closely held business may be a family’s largest and most important asset. We provide advice related to governance, risk management, employment, real estate, and tax matters, as well as continuity and succession planning. In addition, we help family business owners anticipate risk and conflict through each stage of their business. We evaluate the goals of a business’s current and future owners and advise clients on advanced planning related to management, tax structures, valuation, and transition.

As family businesses pass from generation to generation, transferring ownership, control and assets can be a complex and emotional process. Our attorneys work with families and their advisers to do advance planning for these transitions, minimizing conflict and stress. If disputes arise within the family as part of this process, our attorneys are highly skilled at dealing with those conflicts and negotiating them to resolution. We apply our experience and knowledge from prior successful transitions to our clients’ situations to achieve clients’ goals.

Family business succession planning is a vital component for any closely-held business owner’s estate plan. Our business attorneys work closely with our estates and trusts group, coordinating our efforts to plan business ownership transfers using methods that satisfy our clients’ personal objectives while minimizing risk and tax burdens.

Professional Practices

Owners of professional practices are subject to the same important business decisions as to any other business owner. Doctors, dentists, accountants, lawyers, architects and owners of other licensed professional practices frequently call upon our attorneys for counsel on the legal issues confronting their businesses.

MacElree Harvey’s business attorneys regularly establish professional practices, assisting clients with entity selection and formation, as well as management and governance. Our real estate attorneys negotiate leases for office space and space sharing agreements. As practices grow, owners may choose to add associate members. These changes require developing employment contracts, partnership tracks, non-competition agreements, and compensation plans. Further, when more than one person will be involved in the ownership of the practice, our attorneys assist in designing appropriate business agreements that consider issues ranging from buy-in methods to exit strategies.

Employment policies are also an important consideration for professional practices. We advise clients on employment issues such as employment manuals, workplace policies, hiring and termination procedures, as well as compliance with federal, state and local laws.

PRACTICE AREAS

Mergers & Acquisitions

Nonprofits and Charitable Organizations

Tax Law

ATTORNEYS

Joseph A. Bellinghieri

Jeffrey P. Burke

Matthew C. Cooper

Daniel T. Crossland

Harry J. DiDonato

Mary Kay Gaver

Frank W. Hosking III

Katherine A. Isard

J. Kurtis Kline

Jamison C. MacMain

Andrew R. Silverman

OFFICES

Centreville, DE

Hockessin, DE

Kennett Square, PA

West Chester, PA

ARTICLES

Taxation of Foreign Investment in Delaware Entities

Taxation of Foreign Investment in Delaware Entities

How to Form a Delaware Corporation

Stockholder Agreements in Delaware Corporations

ALL PRACTICE AREAS

  • Banking & Finance Law
  • Business and Corporate Law
  • Criminal Defense Law
  • Employment Law
  • Estates & Trusts Law
  • Family Law
  • Litigation Law
  • Mediation and Arbitration
  • Personal Injury Law
  • Real Estate & Land Use Law
  • Tax Law

If you would like to schedule a consultation, please call the firm at 610.436.0100 or submit the contact request form.

Filed Under: Primary

West Chester, PA

January 29, 2015 by Hoppel Design

Centreville, DE | Hockessin, DE | Kennett Square, PA | West Chester, PA

17 West Miner Street
West Chester, PA 19382
610-436-0100

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Attorneys

Joseph A. Bellinghieri

Joseph A. Bellinghieri

Patrick J. Boyer

Patrick J. Boyer

Jeffrey P. Burke

Jeffrey P. Burke

Robert A. Burke

Robert A. Burke

Matthew C. Cooper

Matthew C. Cooper

Harry J. DiDonato

Harry J. DiDonato

Photo of Caroline G. Donato.

Caroline G. Donato

Lindsay A. Dunn

Lindsay A. Dunn

Sally A. Farrell

Sally A. Farrell

Brian J. Forgue

Brian J. Forgue

William J. Gallagher

William J. Gallagher

Patrick J. Gallo, Jr.

Patrick J. Gallo, Jr.

Mary Kay Gaver

Mary Kay Gaver

J. Charles Gerbron, Jr.

J. Charles Gerbron, Jr.

Leo M. Gibbons

Leo M. Gibbons

Joseph P. Green, Jr.

Joseph P. Green, Jr.

Frank W. Hosking III

Frank W. Hosking III

Katherine A. Isard

Katherine A. Isard

J. Kurtis Kline

J. Kurtis Kline

Peter E. Kratsa

Peter E. Kratsa

Mary E. Lawrence

Mary E. Lawrence

Michael G. Louis

Michael G. Louis

Jamison C. MacMain

Jamison C. MacMain

John F. McKenna

John F. McKenna

Matthew M. McKeon

Matthew M. McKeon

Brian L. Nagle

Brian L. Nagle

Lance J. Nelson

Lance J. Nelson

Timothy F. Rayne

Timothy F. Rayne

Michael C. Rovito

Michael C. Rovito

Duke Schneider

Duke Schneider

Andrew R. Silverman

Andrew R. Silverman

Ashley B. Stitzer

Ashley B. Stitzer

Robert M. Tucker

Robert M. Tucker

Photo of the attorney listed on this page.

Natalie R. Young

Practice Areas

Banking & Finance Law

Business and Corporate Law

Commercial Litigation

Criminal Defense

Employment Law

Estates & Trusts Law

Family Law

Litigation Law

Mediation and Arbitration

Real Estate

Real Estate & Land Use Law

Tax Law

Trust & Estate Litigation

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(610) 436-0100

LEGAL SERVICES

  • Banking & Finance Law
  • Business & Corporate Law
  • Criminal Defense
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  • Family Law
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  • Personal Injury Law
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OFFICES

Centreville, DE

5721 Kennett Pike
Wilmington, DE 19807
302-654-4454
Learn More

Hockessin, DE

724 Yorklyn Rd #100
Hockessin, DE 19707
302-239-3700
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Kennett Square, PA

209 East State Street Road
Kennett Square, PA 19348
610-444-3180
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West Chester, PA

17 West Miner Street
West Chester, PA 19382
610-436-0100
Learn More

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