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Return to Virginia Business - December 2003

Cover story

Timothy H. Guare
Timothy H. Guare
Taxes/Estates/Trusts

Related links:
- Big firms are getting bigger — can 'Law-Mart' be far behind?
- Bankruptcy/Creditors' Rights: Frank J. Santoro
- Business Law: Allen C. Goolsby III
- Civil Litigation: James C. Roberts
- Criminal Law: Anthony F. Anderson
- Environmental Law: Paul R. Thomson Jr.
- Family/Domestic Relations: Andrea R. Stiles
- Health Law: Patrick C. Devine Jr.
- Intellectual Property: James R. Creekmore
- Labor/Employment: Harris D. Butler III
- Legislative/Regulatory: Anthony F. Troy
- Real Estate/Construction: Joseph W. Richmond Jr.

by Robert Burke
Virginia Business
December, 2003

There are moments, says Timothy Guare, when the intricacies of tax law and estate planning don’t seem like such dry stuff. The clients who seek his help “are people passing on the product of their life’s work to the people they care most about.” And when Guare shows them how they can accomplish their goals, such as taking care of a surviving spouse or their children, he often gets “the look” — an expression of heartfelt thanks. “It’s so rewarding when you solve these problems for people …” he says. “You just can’t get looks like that anywhere else.”

Timothy Guare
Timothy Guare

Guare, 37, also enjoys the intellectual challenge, a trait reflected in his diverse academic background. He earned a degree in chemistry from the University of Virginia — not exactly a traditional foundation for a law career, but Guare says that estate planning has a certain similarity to the hard sciences. “Science and chemistry and physics involve problem solving. And estate planning is very much that way,” he says. “It’s still a process of listening to a problem, proposing a solution, testing whether a solution makes sense and implementing it.”

Guare’s interest in the estate-planning field began with a summer job he had while attending Harvard Law School. After graduating in 1991, Guare spent a year in Roanoke as a law clerk for U.S. District Court Judge James C. Turk. The next year he joined the Richmond firm of Mezzullo and McCandlish and began working with Louis Mezzullo, 59, an experienced estate-planning attorney. Then in 2000 he and Mezzullo launched their firm. “Estate planning is typically more focused on the individual,” he says, and is often done by smaller law firms. “We tend to have a whole lot of clients who we spend a little bit of time with.”

Guare’s talents suit the work, says Robert Lee, a senior attorney and mentor who worked with him for eight years at Mezzullo and McCandlish. “I’ve been doing this for 35 years and I still call him for advice,” he says. “It takes I think a real talent just to master the interrelationships you have to master between the tax laws, the trust and estate laws, the property laws, all of the things you’ve got to bring together... Tim is up there with the best of them.”

The big topic in estate planning these days is the recent change in federal tax law, allowing a gradual increase in the estate tax exemption. There’s a lot of uncertainty because nobody knows whether Congress will eventually eliminate the tax permanently or let it return. “I don’t offer a guess on that,” Guare says. “I tell them what the law is and what the possibilities are.”

Explaining the rules is challenge sometimes, he says. “I struggle with some of the difficult concepts myself. I also subscribe to the theory that clients are looking generally for solutions to their problems. They’re not looking for us to explain everything there is to know about estate taxes.” Still, he says, “there’s great joy when you do have a client who just doesn’t understand a tax concept and you explain it in a way that they can. You can see the light go on.”

Guare gets practice in explaining the concepts in his role as an adjunct professor at the T.C. Williams School of Law at the University of Richmond. He and Mezzullo share the teaching duties over a semester. “That’s the best learning experience I have. When you... have to teach a difficult subject you’re forced to organize it in your own mind in a way you wouldn’t have to.”

In January Guare starts a new chapter. Mezzullo will be leaving the firm to join Richmond-based McGuireWoods LLP. Mezzullo has been his “mentor from day one,” Guare says. “It’s very sad for me but it’s a good move for both of us.”

Return to Virginia Business - December 2003

 


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