The
Chicago Sun Times
Book Can Help Families Prevent
Estate Battles
By
Terry Savage
Sun-Times Columnist
Still
searching for that perfect present
for the entire family? Here's the
solution: a present that will be
appreciated by every generation
of your family for years to come.
It's the gift of peace of mind,
the knowledge that your family will
never be torn apart by a fight over
"things" from Mom and
Dad's estate.
While
I frequently write about estate
taxes and financial planning, a
new book called The Family Fight:
Planning to Avoid It by Les Kotzer
and Barry Fish reminded me that
while attorneys and financial planners
deal with money issues, the real
challenge to any family is to avoid
a prolonged battle over things like
Mom's china or wedding ring or collection
of plates.
Advises
Kotzer, "As you sit around
the holiday table in the next two
weeks, look at your children laughing,
sharing memories, and loving each
other. Will that picture be the
same in 10 years because of something
you did or didn't do about estate
planning?"
Saving
families
Kotzer,
an estate planning attorney, says
his practice is about saving families,
not estate taxes. He says the key
to good planning is communication,
not legal or tax skills. "Secrecy
is not golden when it comes to estate
planning," he says, adding
that this is not an issue just for
the wealthy. Kotzer asks clients
to bring in their family photo album
because he wants them to realize
those photos are the reason for
doing planning in the first place.
"The
family is the reason to do the planning,"
he says. "If you don't plan,
you take the risk of leaving the
seeds for a family disaster. The
state will decide who inherits your
things, and that division of assets
may not be what's really fair."
You'll
need a specialist in the estate-planning
field to create proper documents.
But even before you take legal steps,
Kotzer says, there are a few things
to consider:
Fights
happen
Kotzer
says family fights happen no matter
how close families seem in life.
Only planning in advance can keep
a family from being torn apart.
Never assume goodwill between your
children or that your kids will
"work it out." Usually
it's the lawyers who end up working
it out, and the relationships between
your children will never be the
same.
Kotzer's
book is written for ordinary people,
not for attorneys. You can get a
copy in time for the holidays by
calling (877) 439-3999. That's a
gift you can't refuse. And that's
the Savage Truth.
Terry Savage is a registered
investment adviser and is on the
board of the Chicago Mercantile
Exchange and McDonald's Corp