The 12 attached files comprise all the documentation required for settling Mommy's and my estates. You can find the originals in as large red Staples cardboard box, prominently labeled "Estate" which box I store on one of the folding tables in the 3rd floor School Street addition room when we have no guests and on one of the folding tables in the 3rd floor garden side addition rooms when we do have a guest. All documents are signed, except for the disclaimer templates which should be appropriately edited and signed perhaps 8 months after the death in issue. Consider googling 26 USC 2518, noting especially 26 USC 2518(3)(c)(B) For the settlement of my estate, I do not anticipate that disclaimers will require submission to 3rd parties, except perhaps to Schwab for my IRA account. Submitting disclaimers to the brokers and banks for the various trusts is irrelevant an risks causing confusion, because the clerks (and perhaps even their lawyers) sometimes fail to distinguish their limited roles as custodians and might presume to usurp our roles as trustees. (It wouldn't be the first time.) Although the original will be available to you, in the contemporary IT culture, pdf printouts are probably acceptable documentation for all purposes except the probating of wills - which I've tried to make unnecessary. Even in case of probate, I would not hesitate to file a motion in Probate Court to secure the validation of pdf printouts and even of the holographic codicil which has much "probative" value. Because I might not have made myself clear, it could be worth your while to review these documents at your leisure before one of the prevalent viruses has caught me, - and of course, I wouldn't be offended if you discussed them with an attorney, who, in a world that was just, would compensate you for CLE.