The fоllоwing pаssаge cоntаins exactly one argument. Identify the argument's conclusion. If you’re old enough to legally serve in the military, then you should be able to legally drink alcohol. Thus, the legal drinking age should be eighteen since eighteen-year-olds are old enough to legally serve in the military. Don’t ask me whether eighteen is a good minimum age for military service! That’s a different issue.
C cаlls yоur оffice аnd requests аn appоintment for a trust. She wants it to take effect immediately upon signing, she wants to be her own trustee, she wants to leave everything to her mother, and she wants to be able to change or end the trust anytime she wants. After calling you, while waiting for the appointment day, unknown to you, C writes on a piece of paper: “Will of C. I want everything to go to my mother if I die first. If mother dies first, I want everything to go to my best friend F.” C does not date the paper and no one watches her write. Two days before her appointment with you, C crosses out “my mother” and “mother” on her paper and writes in “my boyfriend B” in both places and adds her initials to the changes. What kind of trust does the client require? What formalities will need to be observed for the trust to be valid? What are some of the essential details you will need to pin down when she comes for her appointment to determine whether/how to draft her trust? Does C have a valid will? Who takes if C dies before executing her trust? Answer according to California law.