The
Minnesota Star Tribune
Where
There's A Will, There's Harmony
By
Kim Ode
It's
8 a.m. in the afterlife: Do you
know where your kids are? Or your
cufflinks? Or your bank account?
Or the set of china that your
great-grandmother brought from
Ireland and you promised to your
oldest? Although that was before
she married that weirdo.
It
may be only a matter of time before
we see a reality show called "Heirs
Behaving Badly." But that's
real life for many families whose
members never dreamed that sibling
bonds could unravel so completely,
so cruelly, upon reading a parent's
will.
"Siblings
have what I call an involuntary
relationship," said Les Kotzer,
an estate lawyer in Thornhill,
Ontario. "Parents say, 'My
kids will work it out.' But quite
often, they don't. And the people
who do are the lawyers."
Kotzer
has developed a sub-speciality
in family fights, having seen
too many erupt -- or simmer --
in his office. "These are
people they shared a room with,
who they went to the Grand Canyon
with," Kotzer said. He's
written a book, "The Family
Fight," described on his
Web site, http://www.familyfight.com.
The
problem isn't new, but it gained
attention 10 years ago when two
economists at Cornell University
predicted that U.S. baby boomers
were on the brink of receiving
the largest collective inheritance
in history -- about $10 trillion.
Their study made heads snap around
because until that point, surveys
showed that fewer than half of
Americans thought they'd inherit
anything, and even then, not that
much.
Still,
there needn't be a fortune at
stake to cause hard feelings.
Kotzer reels off a litany of instances
where old jealousies resurfaced
or childhood dynamics of the bossy
and the bossed kicked in with
fresh vigor.
Take
one loaded word: Fair. To some,
fair means that everything gets
divided by the number of heirs.
But fair does not always mean
equal, he said. Parents make allowances
for the child who was their caregiver,
or may be more generous to a struggling
kid.
From
a distance, it makes sense. But
any family who's gathered for
Father's Day knows within a moment
of the hamburgers hitting the
grill that everyone sees their
role in the family from a particular
perspective. The question is how
shocked they are when they eventually
learn that views differ.
Ideally,
this stuff should be on the table
long before the moment when it
has to be. But no one wants to
talk about stuff. You want to
bring it up over dessert this
afternoon? You want to be saddled
with having ruined Father's Day?
Which makes it the parents' responsibility.
Death, of course, is hardly their
favorite subject.
At
the very least, parents should
give someone power of attorney
and discuss with that person what
the job means. Kids should think
hard before accepting the responsibility.
"Being
named power of attorney is one
of the most important legal documents
you will sign in your entire life,"
Kotzer said. It puts you in charge
-- "in charge" being
a condition that often falls under
the heading: Be careful what you
wish for; you might get it.
The
rest of the advice, you've heard:
Talk to your kids. Make a will.
Label what goes to whom. Bring
everyone into the discussion.
Remember that while you're talking
about memories, you're also talking
about money.
And,
if this will make it any easier
for Mom or Dad, they might ask
the kids if their own wills are
in good shape. After all, there's
no guarantee that any of us won't
suddenly be incapacitated by illness
or accident.
OK,
you don't have to hash this out
today. But it may be worth mentioning
while you're washing up the dishes
or heading off to the golf course.
We may not have chosen to be related
to each other, but the fact is
that we are until the day we die.
And that can be a long time to
stay mad.