Date & time: 12 November 2025, 1.00pm to 2.00pm AEDT
Enhance your knowledge in Wills and Estates with our one-hour live webinar. Get across the essentials of Wills and Estates Practice, so you can provide accurate advice and safeguard the interests of your clients.
Facilitated by:
Adeline Schiralli, Special Counsel, Southern Waters Legal
Staying current with the essentials of Wills and Estates Practice is vital for providing accurate advice and safeguarding your clients’ interests.
At the end of this live webinar, you can claim 1 CPD point.
Staying current with the essentials of Wills and Estates Practice is vital for providing accurate advice and safeguarding your clients’ interests.
Join our one-hour live webinar to learn about:
This live webinar is ideal for solicitors in general practice, lawyers and specialists in wills and estates, property law, medico law, estate planning specialists, probate lawyers and staff, family law practitioners and new solicitors.
This webinar is produced in NSW and features a NSW based practitioner. This webinar is available to practitioners from NSW.
The time listed for this course is Australian Eastern Daylight Time (AEDT). Please take note of any time differences if you are registering from QLD, WA, SA, NT or outside Australia
If you intend to claim CPD units for this educational activity, please note that CPD activities are not accredited by the Law Society of NSW or any other equivalent local authority, with the exception of Western Australia. If you hold a practising certificate in a state or territory other than Western Australia and this educational activity extends your knowledge and skills in areas that are relevant to your practice needs or professional development, then you should claim one (1) "unit” for each hour of attendance, refreshment breaks not included. The annual requirement is ten (10) CPD units each year from 1 April to 31 March. Some practitioners, such as accredited specialists are required to complete more than ten (10) units each CPD year.
Practitioners holding WA practising certificates are not eligible to earn CPD points for this course.
The course complies with the mandatory requirement of Professional skills – 1 point.
Adeline Schiralli
Adeline Schiralli is an Accredited Specialist in Wills & Estates Law and a highly regarded solicitor in estate planning and elder law. She provides strategic and compassionate advice across all aspects of succession and capacity planning, including Wills, Powers of Attorney, Enduring Guardianships, superannuation death benefit nominations, structuring control of entities, as well as retirement village and aged care agreements.
Adeline joined Southern Waters Legal as Special Counsel in April 2025. Prior to this, she was a Consulting Principal at Keypoint Law and the Legal Practitioner Director of her own firm, Schiralli Pty Ltd. She holds a Master of Laws (Applied Law) with a major in Wills & Estates. Adeline has been consistently recognised in Doyle’s Guide as a ‘Recommended’ lawyer in the category of Leading Wills, Estates & Succession Planning Lawyers (NSW) from 2021 to 2024, and was named a ‘Rising Star’ in 2017.
She is actively involved in shaping the future of estate law in NSW. Adeline is a member of the Law Society of NSW’s Elder Law, Capacity & Succession Committee, and currently serves as Chair of the Specialist Accreditation Wills & Estates Advisory Committee. She also lectures in the College of Law’s Master of Laws (Applied Law) program in both the Wills & Estates and Estate Planning majors.
Please be aware that this webinar organised by the College of Law may be recorded for use on our websites, marketing materials and publications. By attending and participating in a College of Law Continuing Professional Development course, you consent to the College of Law photographing or recording and using your image and likeness and/or voice.
Estate planning is more than just about making a will – it is a wholistic approach that is required to ensure that every aspect of a person’s affairs are taken care of in relation to their death and/or incapacity.