68 Questions Answered / 4 Recent Answers
February 3, 2026
A: ContractsCounsel operates as a marketplace connecting clients with attorneys through a competitive bidding process.
Here's how it works:
You post your legal project on the platform with details about what you need. Attorneys review posted projects and submit bids that include their proposed fees and qualifications.
You review the bids, compare attorney profiles and pricing, and select the attorney that best fits your needs and budget. You work directly with your chosen attorney to complete the project.
ContractsCounsel does not charge a separate platform fee for clients. You pay only the attorney fee that you agreed to when you accepted their bid. This fee is negotiated directly between you and the attorney through the bidding process.
Of course you also have the option to not accept any of the bids.
The benefit of this model is that you control costs by reviewing multiple bids and selecting the attorney whose pricing and qualifications match your requirements.
I hope that helps!
Best regards,
Randy
September 30, 2025
A: When a policy owner takes out a loan against a life insurance policy’s cash value, that loan is secured entirely by the policy itself. It’s not a personal liability of the policy owner, and it doesn’t become a debt of the estate. The insurer tracks the outstanding balance and deducts it from the policy’s value.
In your situation, your mother was the owner of a policy insuring your sister’s life. She borrowed against its cash value years ago. Because she wasn’t legally required to repay the loan during her lifetime, the obligation doesn’t shift to her estate. As executor, you don’t treat that loan as a claim against estate assets.
The only impact is on the policy itself: the loan plus interest reduces the cash value if surrendered, or the death benefit if your sister eventually dies while the policy is still in force.
What Happens After the Owner Dies
Since your mother has passed and the insured (your sister) is still alive, the policy itself becomes part of the estate unless a contingent owner was named. That means you may have temporary control as executor. At this point you have several options:
1. Maintain the policy by continuing premiums if required. The loan remains in place and will keep accruing
interest, which reduces the policy’s value.
2. Transfer ownership to your sister or another beneficiary under the will or intestacy laws. The new owner takes the
policy subject to the outstanding loan.
3. Surrender the policy for its remaining net cash value, which will already reflect a reduction for the loan balance.
4. Allow the policy to lapse by discontinuing premium payments, though that wastes any remaining value.
The right choice depends on the estate’s circumstances, your sister’s wishes, and whether preserving coverage has practical value.
Executor’s Responsibilities
Your duty as executor is to collect estate assets, pay valid debts and expenses, and distribute the remainder under the will or state law. Since policy loans are not debts of the estate, you don’t repay them out of general funds.
The insurance company enforces repayment internally by adjusting the policy value. The only estate-level question is whether to hold, transfer, or surrender the policy itself.
Review the Policy Contract
You should review the actual policy contract to confirm ownership and rights after your mother’s death, as terms can vary. If the estate inherited the policy, the insurer will require documentation before you can act.
For guidance on transferring ownership and managing the policy, it’s best to consult an estate attorney in your jurisdiction. Contracts Counsel can connect you with experienced estate attorneys who can assist with this process.
September 30, 2025
A: When you’re preparing work for a client, the key issue isn’t whether you’ve run a formal copyright search, but whether you have the legal right to use the image. Copyright law automatically protects most images, so relying on the absence of a watermark or a registration record isn’t enough to keep you safe.
Copyright Protection and Ownership
Under U.S. law, copyright attaches the moment an original work is created and fixed in a tangible form (17 U.S.C. § 102). That means virtually every photo, illustration, or graphic you find online is already protected.
Registration with the U.S. Copyright Office strengthens enforcement rights, but it isn’t required for protection. Likewise, the lack of a © symbol doesn’t mean an image is free to use.
Because there’s no central database covering all copyrighted images, a formal copyright search isn’t practical or reliable in most cases. Even if you searched the Copyright Office’s records, you’d only be looking at registered works, which are a small fraction of what’s actually protected.
Risks of Using Unlicensed Images
If you incorporate an image without permission into a commercial project, you and your client could face serious consequences. Infringement can lead to cease-and-desist orders, statutory damages of $750 to $30,000 per work (and up to $150,000 for willful infringement) under 17 U.S.C. § 504(c), and potential liability for the copyright holder’s attorney’s fees.
Courts generally view commercial use as disfavoring any “fair use” defense. Even if you didn’t intend to infringe, liability can still be imposed.
Best Practices for Designers
The best practice is to focus on obtaining images from sources where the licensing terms are clear and legally sound. For example:
• Use reputable stock photo agencies such as Adobe Stock, Shutterstock, or Getty, where commercial licenses are
explicit.
• Choose Creative Commons images that allow commercial use (e.g., CC BY or CC0), but review license terms
carefully.
• Confirm public domain status when applicable, such as U.S. federal government works.
• Contact creators directly for written permission if you want to use their work.
• Keep copies of receipts, license agreements, or permission letters so you can show proof of rights if challenged.
Reverse image search tools like Google Images or TinEye can be useful to trace the origin of an image and identify whether it’s sold or licensed by a third party. However, this is a step in due diligence, not a substitute for obtaining rights.
Professional Responsibility
As a freelance designer, your contracts may hold you responsible for ensuring that the materials you deliver don’t infringe anyone else’s rights. Delivering work that exposes your client to infringement claims can damage your reputation and your client relationship.
The safest practice is to assume that any image you didn’t create yourself is protected until you confirm otherwise and secure the proper license.
September 29, 2025
A: A power of attorney (POA) is only effective while the person who created it (the “principal”) is alive. Once the principal dies, the POA automatically ends.
That means you cannot use your husband’s POA now that he has passed, and any authority you may have had under a POA he gave you is no longer valid. The law is uniform on this point across all U.S. states.
After death, the legal authority to handle someone’s affairs shifts to the executor named in their will or, if no will exists, to an administrator appointed by the probate court.
As the surviving spouse, you typically have priority to be appointed as administrator if your husband left no will. This is the process by which debts, taxes, and distributions of property are handled.
Why You Should Still Consider a Power of Attorney
Although you don’t need a POA for your husband, you may want to create one for yourself while you’re mentally capable. This is an important part of estate planning and ensures that if you ever become incapacitated, someone you trust can step in seamlessly.
There are two key types of POA most people establish:
1. Durable Financial Power of Attorney: Authorizes your agent (sometimes called attorney-in-fact) to manage financial matters—paying bills, handling banking, managing property—if you can’t. It’s “durable” because it remains valid even if you lose capacity.
2. Healthcare Power of Attorney (or Healthcare Proxy): Authorizes your agent to make medical decisions if you’re unable to speak for yourself.
Most people also prepare a living will/advance directive alongside a healthcare POA. This document sets out your specific wishes for end-of-life treatment so your agent isn’t left guessing.
Choosing the Right Agent
The choice of agent is vital. This person will hold significant authority, and you should only appoint someone you trust completely. Common choices include an adult child, a close family member, or a trusted friend. In more complex cases, some people name a professional fiduciary or financial institution.
When deciding, weigh these factors:
• Trustworthiness and integrity: They’ll be in a position to make decisions that directly affect your finances or health.
• Financial responsibility: Especially relevant if they’ll be handling your money.
• Willingness and availability: Make sure the person accepts the responsibility in advance.
• Location: It’s not a strict requirement, but someone nearby can often act more quickly when urgent matters arise.
It’s also wise to name a successor agent in case your first choice is unable or unwilling to serve.
Immediate Steps After Losing a Spouse
Separate from your own planning, you’ll likely need to address your husband’s estate. If he had a will, the executor named there should take the lead. If there’s no will, you can apply to probate court to be appointed administrator.
Alongside that, you may need to update your own estate planning documents, review and change beneficiary designations, and notify Social Security, banks, and insurance companies.
An estate attorney can guide you through both the probate process and setting up your own documents. The attorneys here on Contracts Counsel would be happy to assist you.