The
Cleveland Plain Dealer
Don't
Split Heirs Over Your Estate
By
Lubinger
I
hope he's wrong, but my gut tells
me he's not that far off.
Les
Kotzer, a wills lawyer and author
of "The Family Fight: Planning
to Avoid It" (Continental Atlantic
Publications, 2002, $19.95), describes
a disturbing trend.
Free-spending
baby boomers "laughed at their
parents for keeping the old house
on Main Street, for not going out
much, for not buying Internet stocks,"
he said.
Now,
those free spenders are trapped
with the debt of expensive cars,
big mortgages and other excesses.
And they're hovering like buzzards,
counting on an inheritance to bail
them out, especially with their
financial futures being sucked up
by the stock market.
With
inheritance taking on greater importance,
he believes that more families are
at risk of being torn apart in battles
over who gets what. And it doesn't
have to be.
With
estate planning, "everybody's
concerned with how to save tax,
how to save tax," Kotzer said,
"but nobody's telling them
how to save families."
So
he's trying. (The book can be ordered
at 1-888-965-1500 or www.familyfight.com.)
Realize,
he said, that siblings don't fight
just over the will. Fights also
erupt when a parent becomes incapacitated.
Some
people wrongly assume that the wishes
spelled out in their wills go into
effect when they are unable to care
for themselves. It doesn't. Only
in death. Which is why, along with
a will, parents need to name a power
of attorney to handle their financial
and medical affairs.
It
can be a family member. It doesn't
have to be. But make it someone
you trust.
Don't
do a homemade will. Too many folks
just fill out a generic will printed
off the computer and consider it
done. You need a pro to handle the
specifics.
"One
word can ruin your family,"
Kotzer said.
Suppose
your homemade will spells out that
Susie gets all your antiques and
Johnny gets the rest of your personal
items. As they begin to take possession,
they get to the old grandfather
clock in the den. Is it an antique
or not?
"Or
you leave your piano to your son
in California. Who pays the freight
for that? I've seen battles over
that," he said.
Don't
assume goodwill between your children.
You see them laughing over Thanksgiving
dinner. You can't imagine them ever
fighting over your final wishes.
Don't be naive.
Don't
base your estate planning on your
children having long-term marriages.
Suppose you name your daughter-in-law
as executor of the will, then their
marriage crumbles. It doesn't get
any uglier than that.
"Plan
based on the terrible assumption
that your children's marriages may
not be permanent," he advised.
Don't
plan your will in a second marriage
the same way you would plan one
in a first marriage. Blended families
create some obvious complex issues.
"Don't
assume that your second spouse is
going to look after your children
from your first marriage,"
he said.
Constantly
review your will. Suppose you plan
to leave your baseball card collection
to your son and something of equal
value to your daughter. Ten years
later, the value of each item could
have changed dramatically, creating
an unintended imbalance. Revisit
and adjust.
©
2002 The Plain Dealer. Used with
permission.