Buffalo
Evening News
A
Will dDrafted By An Attorney Helps
Prevent Family Feuds
By Mimi Whitefield
Knight Ridder
It
should have been a straightforward
tale of business succession. A father
and his son had managed a bowling
alley together for a number of years
and when the dad died, the younger
man inherited the business. But that's
when the family feud began. To save
on taxes, the father had put the bowling
alley in one company and formed another
company to hold the building and the
land. Apparently through an oversight,
he left the company holding the real
estate to his son and his other children.
That
put the son with the bowling alley
in a compromising position with his
siblings. "They turned out to
be horrific landlords," raising
the rent far higher than market rates
and showing no compassion for their
brother's ability to make a living,
says Les Kotzer, a wills and estate
lawyer.
The
case illustrates the type of internecine
problems that can develop when wealth
passes from generation to generation.
Kotzer
and his partner, Barry Fish, have
just written a book, "Family
Fight: How to Avoid It," that
details the pitfalls of inheritances,
their potential to tear families apart
and how to avoid them.
It's
aimed at the traditional family -
or maybe the Brady Bunch, says Kotzer,
because it also addresses inheritance
issues that crop up as a result of
second marriages and blended families.
Wills
have become a hot topic, Kotzer says,
as the crush of baby boomers begins
to inherit wealth from their parents.
Exacerbating tensions, he says, is
the reality that some credit-addicted
boomers are "depending on inheritances
from their Depression-era parents
to pay their debts" and will
fight tooth-and-nail because they
don't want to let a penny of the inheritance
go.
The
Sept. 11 tragedy also has prompted
more people to face their own mortality,
the possibility of unexpected death
and the need for estate planning.
Despite
the proliferation of will kits and
online forms that are supposed to
make will preparation easy, Kotzer
says, "I'm telling people to
go to a lawyer - their own lawyer"
to have a will drafted.
The
will that caused the bowling alley
conflict was handwritten. Kotzer says
he's seen sizable estates governed
by homemade wills - with plenty of
ensuing problems.
Many
books address estate planning from
a tax-savings point of view. Not this
one. "We're not talking about
saving tax; we're talking about saving
families."
The
book gives practical advice on drawing
up a will, appointing executors, organizing
personal affairs and possessions so
relatives aren't at each other's throats,
and avoiding unintentional inequities.
It
doesn't matter if an estate is large
or small. "I've seen fights over
CD players, dining-room tables - crazy
things," Kotzer said.
Sometimes
family relations are already strained.
"But you make things a lot worse
by not anticipating problems and discussing
your plans while you're alive,"
Kotzer said.
Some
parents, however, find it difficult
to talk with their children about
death, and some adult children hesitate
to broach the topic because they don't
want parents to think they're after
their money.
But
communication is crucial, Fish and
Kotzer say.
If,
for example, a parent decides to leave
more to one child than another or
cuts a child out of a will, they advise
leaving a letter or videotape in which
the parent explains the reasons for
his or her decision.
If
a challenge is anticipated, lawyers
suggest attaching a doctor's letter
attesting to mental competency at
the time a will is signed.
Kotzer
and Fish have even coined a term,
"unintentional inequality,"
when parents think they're being fair
- but unintentionally distribute their
estates inequitably, setting up conflicts
between heirs.
One
example: a parent who leaves a coin
collection valued at $10,000 to one
child and $10,000 in cash to another
child. Over 20 years or so the coin
collection may have appreciated and
be worth considerably more than $10,000,
while the cash inheritance remains
static.
He
advises people to review their wills
frequently - at least once every five
years - and more often if family circumstances
change.
Second
marriages can also be a treacherous
area when it comes to inheritances
unless the deceased has clearly spelled
out his or her intentions in a will.
Kotzer said he has seen a number of
cases where one of the partners in
a second marriage dies and leaves
everything to the surviving spouse
with the understanding that when the
spouse dies, he or she will provide
for the children of the first marriage.
But
that doesn't always happen. Sometimes
the spouse leaves everything to his
or her own children, leaving one set
of kids without the antiques that
have been in their family for generations,
their dad's war medals or a stake
in a business a parent may have worked
a lifetime to build.
"Parents
often make big assumptions when estate
planning and one is goodwill among
family members," Kotzer said.
While
planning ahead won't eliminate all
possible family conflicts over inheritances,
the lawyers say it should at least
minimize the risk of inheriting family
turmoil along with the heirlooms.
Fish
and Kotzer's book is available online
at www.familyfight.com or by calling
1-877-439-3999.