The
Charlotte Observer
Don't
Leave A Legacy Of Hard Feelings
By
Pam Kelley, Staff Writer
Recently,
my brother told me about a friend
struggling to come to a truce with
his three siblings over their father's
estate.
When
their father died, he left his house
to his four children. My brother's
friend wanted to keep the house and
had offered to buy out his siblings'
shares, but they weren't convinced
they were getting a fair deal. Today,
relations remain strained. Some of
the siblings no longer speak. We shook
our heads and agreed never to let
an inheritance come between us.
But
even the best of intentions don't
always prevent fights, attorney Les
Kotzer says. As a specialist on wills
and estates, Kotzer has witnessed
many quarrels over family estates,
often between baby-boomer children
squabbling over money and property
left by their Depression-era parents.
Kotzer
and his partner, Barry Fish, are authors
of "The Family Fight: Planning
To Avoid It," (Continental Atlantic
Publications Inc.; $24.95). Often,
estate-planning books focus on avoiding
estate taxes. This one has a different
aim: preventing inheritance squabbles
from destroying family relationships.
Though
some family fights revolve around
money, many erupt when siblings fight
over memories, or slights that one
child feels. "What we're talking
about is usually stuff that never
goes to court, but it leaves bitter
memories that last," Kotzer says.
Families
can avoid or at least minimize such
acrimony if parents are foresighted,
open and thorough when they prepare
wills, the authors say. Among their
pieces of advice:
Secrecy
breeds fights. Parents should tell
their children about their plans.
Don't
make assumptions. Don't assume, for
instance, that your kids will exercise
good will when they divide your valuables.
Talk to them about who wants the china
or the handmade quilt, and record
these decisions.
Similarly,
don't leave a business or piece of
property to a child without discussion.
She might find it more burden than
gift.
Don't
assume that equal means fair. If one
child has acted as a caregiver to
a parent, giving many hours of his
or her time, perhaps that child is
entitled to a larger share of the
estate.
Exercise
extra care when a second marriage
is involved. The authors tell of one
man whose father remarried and left
everything to his second wife when
he died. When she died, she left everything
to her own two children. What hurts
most, he told the authors, is that
he has lost family heirlooms, including
photos of himself and his parents.
Be
organized. The book includes a checklist
to help organize important documents,
names and phone numbers so your family
can find them.
Be
specific. Kotzer recalls a woman who
left "personal monies" to
a sister. Did she mean money in bank
accounts? Did she want to include
certificates of deposit? It took a
lawsuit to settle that one.
"The
Family Fight" isn't available
in bookstores, but you can order it
at www.familyfight.com, at www.amazon.com,
or by calling 1-877-439-3999.