News

Coogan Smith LLP Highlights 2026 Legal Priorities For Everyday Life

  • Attleboro firm shares the key numbers residents, homeowners, and small organizations should focus on in the year ahead

Boston, MA, 29th April 2026, ZEX PR WIRE — Coogan Smith LLP is urging Attleboro area residents to treat 2026 as a “clean up and catch up” year for the basics that cause the biggest legal headaches: planning, property, small business risk, and scams.

Instead of fear headlines, the firm is pushing simple goals backed by real world numbers.

“We wanted to give people a scoreboard, not a lecture,” said one Partner. “If you can track a few key numbers in your life, you are already ahead of most of the country.”

1. Planning: Close the will and proxy gap

National surveys show that only about one third of American adults have a will, and rates are even lower for people with children at home. In one recent study, just 32 percent of respondents said they had an estate planning document in place. At the same time, more than 60 percent said they believe everyone should have one.

Coogan Smith LLP sees the cost of that gap every year.

“We still meet families where no one knows who can talk to the doctor, who can access bank accounts, or where the key documents are,” said a trusts and estates lawyer at the firm. “Most of that pain could have been avoided with one evening of planning.”

Simple 2026 targets:

  • One page “family map” listing key contacts, accounts, and where documents live

  • Three signed documents for every adult: will, power of attorney, health care proxy

  • One review every two to three years, or after major life events

The firm wants local households to aim for 100 percent of adults with at least those three documents by the end of 2026.

2. Property: Treat your home like an asset, not a mystery

Owner occupied housing still makes up the largest part of household wealth for many families in Massachusetts. Home equity often accounts for 50 to 70 percent of total net worth for middle income households.

At the same time, property claims and disputes spike around storms, renovations, and sales.

“We see owners with no idea what their policy excludes, no record of improvements, and no clear paper trail,” said one real estate attorney. “Courts and insurers do not reward guesswork.”

Simple 2026 targets:

  • One folder, paper or digital, with copies of deed, policy, permits, and photos

  • At least ten current photos of major systems and the exterior for claims

  • One policy review call with an agent to check deductibles and coverage

  • For buyers, one zoning check and one call to the town before signing an offer

The firm suggests homeowners think of this as a three item checklist, not a full remodel.

3. Small business and side hustles: Clean contracts and worker status

Small businesses account for nearly half of U.S. private sector employment, and Massachusetts is no exception. Many of those businesses use old or generic contracts that do not match current law or how they actually work.

“We keep seeing people run a 2026 business on a 2012 template,” said a business lawyer at the firm. “Prices changed. Risk changed. Their agreements did not.”

Worker classification is another growing pressure point. Nationally, billions of dollars in back taxes and penalties are tied to misclassified workers.

Simple 2026 targets for owners and freelancers:

  • One current, plain language service agreement under ten pages

  • Clear scope, payment, and ownership terms written in simple sentences

  • A list of every contract that auto renews in the first half of the year

  • One status check for anyone treated as a contractor but acting like staff

The firm’s rule of thumb is blunt: if you would be upset to be wrong about it in five years, get advice now instead of later.

4. Community groups and nonprofits: Paperwork that matches reality

Local nonprofits, school groups, and clubs rely on volunteers and small budgets. They also face real legal duties. Missed filings, unclear bylaws, and weak minutes create risk that often lands in the lap of volunteer board members.

“Most board fights we see did not start as legal issues,” said a governance attorney with the firm. “They started as confusion about rules.”

Common trouble spots include:

  • Bylaws no one has read in years

  • Minutes that do not actually record decisions

  • No written conflict of interest process

  • Late or missing state and IRS filings

Simple 2026 targets for any board:

  • Print bylaws and highlight quorum, terms, and removal rules

  • Keep board packets to a short agenda and one decision page

  • Collect one conflict form from every board member each year

  • Put all minutes and filings in one shared folder with clear names

5. Fraud and scams: Use one rule for everything

Consumer complaint data shows that identity theft, credit card fraud, and imposter scams remain at the top of the charts in many states. Seniors and small businesses are frequent targets.

“The most expensive cases we work on often start with one hurried click or one rushed phone call,” said a litigator at the firm. “People can protect themselves with one simple rule.”

The rule is this:
Never move money or share data from an incoming call, text, or email. Hang up. Then contact the company using a number or address you already trust.

Simple 2026 targets:

  • One scam script saved in your phone notes and shared with family

  • Zero payments sent by gift card, wire, or crypto to new payees without a direct call

  • One shared contact card for older relatives that lists bank, insurer, doctor, and a trusted helper

A 26 step year for 2026

Coogan Smith LLP is asking residents to think in small moves, not big resolutions. The firm suggests tackling two simple legal or planning tasks per month, for a total of 26 actions in 2026.

“You do not need a perfect year,” said one Partner. “You just need 26 smart steps. Two a month. That is enough to protect most families, homes, and small organizations.”

Residents can start with three moves this winter:

  • Write the one page family map

  • Take ten photos of their home and store them with policy details

  • List their three most important contracts or memberships and note renewal dates

About Coogan Smith LLP
Founded in 1946, Coogan Smith LLP is Attleboro’s oldest full service law firm. The firm represents individuals, families, businesses, and nonprofits across southern New England in areas such as estate planning, probate, real estate, land use, business law, civil litigation, and family law, with a focus on practical, community focused counsel.

The Post Coogan Smith LLP Highlights 2026 Legal Priorities For Everyday Life first appeared on ZEX PR Wire

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