Dividing
An Estate Can Rip Even A Close
Family Apart
Wills need to be clear and precise
to avoid conflict
Lorrayne Anthony
The Canadian Press
TORONTO
- They may be the picture of family
harmony -- brothers and sisters
who play together as kids and
enjoy each other's company as
young adults.
But
that can all change on the death
of a parent.
There
could be room for discrepancy
in interpreting what mom meant
when she said her assets should
be split evenly among the children.
Who
gets the antique dining room set?
Who gets great-grandma's silver
tea service? And what about dad's
war medal?
Besides,
mom and dad paid for the first-born
to go to Harvard University in
Cambridge, Mass., while the other
kids lived at home and went to
McMaster University in Hamilton
for a fraction of the cost. Shouldn't
that enter into the discussion
of who gets what and how much?
Wills
need to be as clear and precise
as possible to avoid disagreements
that can escalate to the point
where siblings don't speak to
each other, says Les Kotzer, estate
lawyer and co-author of The Family
Fight, an estate-planning guide.
"There's
always an assumption that the
kids will work it out," said
Kotzer, who's based in Thornhill,
Ont. "What I tell people
is that often it's not the kids
that work it out, it's the lawyers
that work things out. And when
that happens (the children) don't
have the same relationship they
had before.
"As
a wills and estate lawyer, I see
the results of poor or no planning
and how it can rip a close family
apart."
Kotzer
says that in recent years he's
seen an increase in all-out feuds
among siblings over estate issues,
a trend that prompted him and
co-author Barry Fish to write
their book. And it appears the
increased fighting can partly
be attributed to demographics.
In the next 10 years Canadians
will experience the largest intergenerational
transfer of wealth in the country's
history, as baby boomers inherit
millions from their penny-pinching
parents, says the Ontario Bar
Association.
"That
was a saving generation,"
said Kotzer. Those who grew up
during the Depression learned
to do without. They darned clothes,
drove the same car for years instead
of leasing new and pricey vanity
vehicles every few years.
"Their
children, on the other hand, were
the spenders who lost money on
the stock market. You see big
houses and fancy cars and you
think they have money, but in
reality this generation doesn't."
Kotzer
recalls a client who came to him
in an expensive car and wearing
a Rolex watch. The man had lost
everything in the dot-com crash.
When Kotzer asked what he was
doing for money, the man's wife
replied that he was a "waiter."
The lawyer was taken aback to
learn that waiting on tables could
bankroll such a wealthy lifestyle.
Turns out the couple were "waiting"
to inherit his parents' assets.
The
problem is, many people assume
they'll inherit a parental windfall
while in their 40s or 50s.
But
with life expectancies creeping
up, most boomers will have to
wait longer for less money.
The
fate of a family business can
also hinge on proper estate planning
-- whether it's a corner store
or a multibillion-dollar company.
A
classic case is the Steinberg
grocery-store chain based in Montreal,
a $4.5-billion empire with 37,000
employees when owner and company
patriarch Sam Steinberg died in
1978 without designating a successor.
His
three daughters fought bitterly
over how the company should be
run, for a time speaking only
through lawyers, says Gordon Pitts,
author of In The Blood: Battles
to Succeed in Canada's Family
Businesses.
"In
the end it tore the company apart,
and they eventually sold it,"
says Pitts. "There was no
other resolution."
The
sale turned out to be a disaster.
Steinberg's went bankrupt under
its new owner and the stores were
sold off among a number of competitors.
"Sam
Steinberg couldn't pull the trigger,"
says Pitts. "He couldn't
resolve the estate-planning issues."
And
when businesses crash this badly
because of family feuds after
the owner's death, the wounds
don't heal quickly.
"Very
often it takes another generation
before people start talking to
each other again," says Pitts.