The
Christian Science Monitor
Planning
Can Defuse Fights Over Estates
By
Marilyn Gardner
Staff writer of The Christian Science
Monitor
When
the conversation turns to estate
planning, lawyer Les Kotzer can
tell stories. Horror stories, he
calls them all true, and
most of them avoidable if families
had talked more openly.
In
one case, two siblings fought over
a silver cup after their father
died. The ensuing bitterness split
the family.
On
another occasion, a woman came into
Mr. Kotzer's office with a crystal
figurine she had given to her mother.
Because her mother mistakenly bequeathed
it to someone else, the daughter
smashed it in Kotzer's presence.
If she couldn't have it, she said,
no one would.
In
a third case, two brothers were
arguing in his boardroom over a
provision in their father's will.
One took a heavy book off Kotzer's
desk and threw it, missing his brother
but knocking a painting off the
wall.
"These
were once kids who were probably
singing in the back seat of the
station wagon on the way to the
Grand Canyon with Mom and Dad,"
Kotzer says. "They weren't
born to hate each other. They grew
up in the same home. They should
be guardians of each other."
To
help families deal amicably with
inheritances, Kotzer and fellow
attorney Barry Fish have written
"The Family Fight: Planning
to Avoid It" (Continental Atlantic
Publications, $19.95). They note
that relatives fight not just over
money but over memories, possessions,
and slights, real or perceived.
Kotzer
measures the depth of the problem
in part by the response he draws
during radio and TV appearances.
On one TV call-in show, 65 people
waited on hold, wanting to talk
about their family's estate fights.
Estate
planning has gained new attention
lately in the wake of headlines
detailing the feud Ted Williams's
children are waging over his last
wishes.
In
addition, Kotzer says, the Sept.
11 tragedy "woke people up
to the reality that we're not here
forever." Some parents and
children now find it easier to talk
openly and plan for the future.
Even
so, less than half of Americans
have a will, increasing the chances
of acrimony. And if a will is not
carefully written, relatives can
still feud.
That's
a problem, says Kotzer, for baby
boomers expecting to inherit their
parents' estates.He watches some
clients in that generation drive
into his parking lot in a beautiful
car and concede, "Yeah, the
bank owns it." Others arrive
wearing expensive clothing.
"Even
though they appear to have wealth,
a lot of them are really depending
on their parents' money," Kotzer
says.
For
benefactors and beneficiaries alike,
the question "What is fair?"
remains central. Sometimes, in an
effort to divide assets fairly among
children, parents create what Kotzer
calls "inadvertent inequality."
If
a father has a coin collection or
baseball-card collection that was
appraised in 1990 for $5,000, for
example, he might leave that to
his son and leave $5,000 in cash
to his daughter. A decade later,
the card collection might be worth
$20,000. Yet unless dad updates
his will, the daughter will still
receive only $5,000. Land and family
businesses can also increase exponentially
in value, Kotzer says.
Second
marriages create some of the most
difficult issues in estate planning.
Kotzer tells of one man who left
everything outright to his second
wife, expecting her to pass along
various assets to his son. The stepmother
told the son, "Don't worry,
I love you like my own son. Dad
always wanted you to be protected."
But she bequeathed everything to
her own children. The husband's
son did not receive even family
heirlooms and photo albums.
After
a remarriage, Kotzer says, consider
setting up a trust for a second
spouse.
Other
factors also create special circumstances
and potential disagreements in dividing
assets.
In
families where an adult child has
spent years caring for a parent,
sometimes giving up a career to
do so, the parent might want to
express appreciation with a monetary
gift. "Explain to the other
kids, 'Jane lived with me. She deserves
more.' The caregiver might say,
'Mom, I don't want any more,' but
at least the offer prevents her
from feeling slighted."
Also,
if parents spent $50,000 on one
child's college education, it might
be appropriate to increase the amount
they leave to their other children.
If
one child is irresponsible or has
an addiction that could drain an
inheritance, parents might be tempted
to leave him or her nothing. Kotzer
urges people to weigh that decision
carefully and to speak to other
children about it: "I'm thinking
about cutting John out of the will.
What do you think of that?"
A
sibling might say, "Don't do
it. I have to live with him after
you're gone. Let him feel he's been
treated fairly."
An
option is to set up a trust for
that child. The money can be invested
and managed, with the provision
that another person can get money
from the trust for the child's care.
In
cases like these, it can be valuable
to leave a letter or videotape to
heirs, explaining why a certain
provision was made. A videotape
is not a will, but it offers a way
to make wishes clear.
Kotzer
warns against do-it-yourself wills,
calling them "recipes for disaster."
Even though these simple forms may
be valid, imprecise language can
cause confusion.
One
woman wrote in her will, "I
leave my antiques to my daughter.
I leave everything else to my son."
But "antiques" is not
an easy word to define. Is her 1960
clock an antique? Her heirs disagreed.
Similarly,
another woman left her "personal
monies" to her siblings and
everything else to her husband.
That set off an expensive legal
battle. A court determined that
personal monies referred only to
her bank accounts.
All
this acrimony saddens Kotzer, who
comes from a close family. "Mom
never favored me or my brother,
and there was never secrecy,"
he says.
Yet
many parents have a hard time talking
to their adult children about estates.
They think: "It'll all work
out after we go." Children
are equally unsure how to broach
the subject. They fear parents will
assume they're simply after money.
"Secrecy
is not golden when it comes to estate
work," Kotzer says. "You
should be talking to your children
about why you are leaving more to
one than the other, if that's the
case, so there are no surprises
when a parent dies." That does
not mean parents must tell children
now how much they own and what their
estate is worth.
Kotzer
also pleads for order. Sometimes
clients come into his office with
a bag filled with financial records.
They dump it on his desk and ask,
"OK, where do we start?"
This can create confusion and suspicion,
producing rifts if heirs think one
sibling, perhaps the executor, is
withholding information about assets.
Many
of the family feuds Kotzer sees
will never go to court. Although
they are settled, they leave bitter
memories that can last for years.
To
avoid this, he suggests gathering
the family together, perhaps at
Thanksgiving, and telling children
how important it is that they don't
fight over the estate. "A parent
could say, 'I love you all, you're
all equal to me. John and Mary,
is there anything in the house you'd
like someday? If you bought anything
for me, tell me. I want you to have
it back.' "
Alternatively,
adult children can broach the subject
by telling parents, "We need
to talk. Don't make an island out
of us. We want to be close."
Look
around that table, Kotzer says.
"Look at your children laughing
with each other. Can you imagine
in 20 years those children not talking
to each other? You don't want to
leave a legacy of hate with your
children.
"You've
got to plan," he continues.
"By leaving a voice, you can
protect your family. That can be
your legacy to your kids
not creating fighting among the
children."
'The Family Fight' is available
by calling 1-877-439-3999 or at
www.familyfight.com.