The
Miami Herald
Even
For The Middle Class, A Good Will
Should Save Relationships -- Not
Taxes
Mimi Whitefield
Miami Herald
It
should have been a straightforward
tale of business succession. A
father and his son had managed
a bowling alley together for a
number of years and when the dad
died, the younger man inherited
the business.
But
that's when the family feud began.
To save on taxes, the father had
put the bowling alley in one company
and formed another company to
hold the building and the land.
Apparently through an oversight,
he left the company holding the
real estate to his son and his
other children.
That
put the son with the bowling alley
in a compromising position with
his siblings. ''They turned out
to be horrific landlords,'' raising
the rent far higher than market
rates and showing no compassion
for their brother's ability to
make a living, says Les Kotzer,
a wills and estate lawyer.
Though
hardly as high-profile as the
family warfare now surrounding
tycoon Victor Posner's will and
his multimillion-dollar estate,
the case illustrates the type
of internecine problems that can
develop when wealth passes from
generation to generation.
Kotzer
and his partner, Barry Fish, have
just written a book, Family Fight:
How to Avoid It, that details
the pitfalls of inheritances,
their potential to tear families
apart and how to avoid such conflicts.
It's
aimed at the traditional family
-- or maybe the Brady Bunch, says
Kotzer, because it also addresses
inheritance issues that crop up
as a result of second marriages
and blended families.
Wills
have become a hot topic, Kotzer
says, as the crush of baby boomers
begin to inherit wealth from their
parents. Exacerbating tensions,
he says, is the reality that some
credit-addicted boomers are ''depending
on inheritances from their Depression-era
parents to pay their debts'' and
will fight tooth-and-nail because
they don't want to let a penny
of the inheritance go.
The
Sept. 11 tragedy also has prompted
more people to face their own
mortality, the possibility of
unexpected death and the need
for estate planning.
Despite
the proliferation of will kits
and online forms that are supposed
to make will preparation easy,
Kotzer says, ''I'm telling people
to go to a lawyer -- their own
lawyer'' to have a will drafted.
The
will that caused the bowling alley
conflict was handwritten. Kotzer
says he's seen sizable estates
governed by homemade wills --
with plenty of ensuing problems.
Many
books address estate planning
from a tax-savings point of view.
Not this one. ''We're not talking
about saving tax; we're talking
about saving families,'' Kotzer
says.
The
book gives practical advice on
drawing up a will, appointing
executors, organizing personal
affairs and possessions so relatives
aren't at each other's throats,
and avoiding unintentional inequities.
It
doesn't matter if an estate is
large or small. ''I've seen fights
over CD players, dining-room tables
-- crazy things,'' Kotzer says.
Sometimes
-- as in the case of the Posners
-- family relations are already
strained. ''But you make things
a lot worse by not anticipating
problems and discussing your plans
while you're alive,'' Kotzer says.
Some
parents, however, find it difficult
to talk with their children about
death, and some adult children
hesitate to broach the topic because
they don't want parents to think
they're after their money.
But
communication is crucial, Fish
and Kotzer say.
If,
for example, a parent decides
to leave more to one child than
another or cuts a child out of
a will, they advise leaving a
letter or videotape in which the
parent explains the reasons for
his or her decision.
In
the final Posner will, for example,
Posner explains that he is leaving
nothing to three of his four children
because he provided for them during
his lifetime. However, his will
is being challenged on the grounds
that he wasn't mentally competent
and that his business associate,
Brenda Nestor, exerted undue influence
at the time he signed his latest
will.
If
such a challenge is anticipated,
lawyers suggest attaching a doctor's
letter attesting to mental competency
at the time a will is signed.
Kotzer
and Fish have even coined a term,
''unintentional inequality,''
when parents think they're being
fair -- but unintentionally distribute
their estates inequitably, setting
up conflicts between heirs.
One
example: a parent who leaves a
coin collection valued at $10,000
to one child and $10,000 in cash
to another child. Over 20 years
or so the coin collection may
have appreciated and be worth
considerably more than $10,000,
while the cash inheritance remains
static.
He
advises people to review their
wills frequently -- at least once
every five years -- and more often
if family circumstances change.
Second
marriages can also be a treacherous
area when it comes to inheritances
unless the deceased has clearly
spelled out his or her intentions
in a will. Kotzer says he has
seen a number of cases where one
of the partners in a second marriage
dies and leaves everything to
the surviving spouse with the
understanding that when the spouse
dies, he or she will provide for
the children of the first marriage.
But
that doesn't always happen. Sometimes
the spouse leaves everything to
his or her own children, leaving
one set of kids without the antiques
that have been in their family
for generations, their dad's war
medals, or a stake in a business
a parent may have worked a lifetime
to build.
''Parents
often make big assumptions when
estate planning and one is goodwill
among family members,'' Kotzer
says.
While
planning ahead won't eliminate
all possible family conflicts
over inheritances, the lawyers
say it should at least minimize
the risk of inheriting family
turmoil along with the heirlooms.