Integral Financial Solutions, LLC

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Integral Financial Solutions, LLC provides fast, professional service to people who want to convert scheduled disbursements (cash flows) into lump sum payments today

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How can we help YOU?

We can provide Litigation Funding or advances, Inheritances Cash Advances and we buy Structured Settlements and Real Estate Notes.


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    Real Estate Notes:

    Receiving payments on a mortgage? Sell all or part of that mortgage. Rearview and turnaround is quick. Real Estate Professionals can learn how to create good Mortgage notes to help sell slow moving listings.

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    Inheritance Cash Advances:

    Expecting an inheritance? Are you waiting for the sale of a house? We advance money to people expecting inheritances. Advances can be funded in only a few days.

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    Structured Settlments:

    Receiving payments on a Structured Settlement of a lawsuit or an annuity? We buy those futures payments. It can be done in almost all 50 states.

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How can we help? Any information you provide is considered confidential and will not be shared outside of our firm.

Recent Blog Post

N.Y. Judge Finds Man Entitled to Inherit Same-Sex Partner’s Estate

A New York court has recognized that a gay man may inherit from his partner’s estate.  This looks like one of the first rulings of it’s kind.

Recognizing the validity of a same-sex marriage between New Yorkers contracted in Canada, a Manhattan surrogate has ruled that a man is entitled to inherit the entire estate of his deceased male partner.

Surrogate Judge Kristin Booth Glen last week in Matter of the Estate of H. Kenneth Ranftle, 4585-2008, designated J. Craig Leiby as the “surviving spouse and sole distributee” of H. Kenneth Ranftle, who died on Nov. 1, 2008, just five months after the pair married in Quebec.

Her decision comes 4 1/2 months after Queens Surrogate Robert L. Nahman took a more cautious approach in holding that the validity of gay marriage had not been “definitely determined.” Nahman ruled that the deceased partner’s parents had to be included in probate proceedings.

By contrast, Glen determined that Ranftle’s three siblings were not entitled to notification of the probate proceedings under Surrogate’s Court Procedure Act §1403(1)(a). She cited the Feb. 1, 2008, decision of Martinez v. County of Monroe, 50 AD3d 189, in which the Appellate Division, 4th Department, ordered Monroe County to extend health insurance coverage to the same-sex spouse of a female employee working at a community college.

The New York Court of Appeals has ruled that same-sex marriage is not valid if contracted in New York. But the court in Martinez held that, with a few exceptions, state agencies should recognize marriages solemnized in Canada, Massachusetts and other states where it is legal.

Full article from Law.com