Associated
Press
Estate
Planning Is A Lot More Than Money
By Eileen Alt Powell
AP Business Writer
Susan
Udin doesn't expect problems when the
time comes to settle her 92-year-old mother's
estate. Her mother, who lives in a nearby
assisted living facility, has a will that
divides her assets 50-50 between Udin
and her sister.
"There's
absolutely no mystery to it," said
Udin, who is 57 and a professor at the
State University of New York in Buffalo.
Udin
doesn't expect any squabbling over her
mother's possessions, because the sisters
have different tastes. Still, they had
to find a solution about what to do with
some Italian prints their mother already
gave them.
"We
trade them back and forth every year,"
Udin said.
Fact
is, estate planning isn't just about money;
there can be complex emotional issues
involved.
Parents
may worry whether they're being fair in
the way they divvy up property among children
and stepchildren. A child may have a special
fondness for a certain family heirloom,
but be reluctant to speak up for fear
of sounding greedy. Neither side, meanwhile,
looks forward to discussing anything that
has to do with death and dying.
But
experts say parents and children who don't
talk about legacy issues miss a great
opportunity for sharing their thoughts
on family traditions and values and may
be setting the stage for feuding after
the parents' deaths.
A
new study indicates heirs are five times
more likely to fight about fulfilling
their parents' last wishes and distributing
personal property than about dividing
up their parents' money.
The
Allianz American Legacies Study, sponsored
by the Allianz Life Insurance Co., also
found that seniors and baby boomers ranked
money last in their list of important
estate issues. Ahead of it were sharing
values and life lessons, understanding
final instructions and wishes to be fulfilled,
and distributing personal possessions
that have emotional value.
Still,
just one-third of the more than 2,500
people surveyed said they had discussed
such a wide range of issues.
Ken
Dychtwald, president and chief executive
of Age Wave, a San Francisco-based consulting
group that helped design the survey, said
families may be approaching estate planning
incorrectly.
"We
found that when you ask people to talk
about inheritance, everyone clams up,"
Dychtwald said. "Inheritance is about
money, and it's seen as greedy. But ask
them to talk about legacy ... it's as
if we hit some kind of magic button, and
people open up about leaving behind family
values and traditions -- and money was
just a piece of that."
Among
those who took part in the study was Janet
Rowe, 69, of Oak Park, Ill. Rowe, who
still works part-time as a nurse, said
she wants to be remembered "as a
loving, caring person." But, she
said, "I don't talk about it; I've
tried to act it."
Rowe
also has strong feelings about how her
estate will be divided. Under her will,
each of her three children will get one-quarter
of the estate, and her four grandchildren
will share the remaining quarter.
"I
was trying to be even," Rowe said.
"But I wanted the grandchildren to
get something of their own, and not have
to depend on their parents to get it."
Estate
attorney Les Kotzer, author of "The
Family Fight -- Planning to Avoid It,"
said some parents think they don't need
to do any estate planning because they
don't see themselves as wealthy.
That
attitude, Kotzer said, ignores the fact
that their children may have strong feelings
about a painting that has hung in the
dining room for years or a table inherited
from grandparents or even their father's
war medals.
Many
parents mistakenly assume their kids will
work things out among themselves after
they die.
"More
often, it's the lawyers who have to work
it out," Kotzer said. "And once
a lawyer gets between your kids -- say
the lawyer sends a letter to a sister
on behalf of a brother -- their relationship
won't be the same anymore."
There
are several ways to accomplish fair distribution,
he said. Children can be asked to continue
sharing the family cottage, for example.
Or each can be told to "take back
what you bought me." Or they can
agree to take turns selecting an item
until all are gone. Or they can put names
on things they want, while the parents
are still alive to referee.
"The
point is, estate planning is one area
where silence is not golden," he
said. "You have to communicate, and
you have to organize your affairs before
you pass away or you risk leaving a legacy
of anger."
"The
Family Fight" is not available in
bookstores; to order a copy from the publisher,
call 1-877-439-3999.