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New
Jersey Star-Ledger
The
Great Divide
Dole
out the family treasures without destroying
the family bonds
Sunday,
January 25, 2004
By
Christine V. Baird
Star-Ledger Staff
Undoubtedly,
buried somewhere in a closet or drawer,
is a stash of family photos, capturing a
child's first steps, a bow at a school play,
backyard barbecues and grinning faces with
ice cream-covered smiles.
Reliably
there, if unorganized, to preserve memories
of family. But they can do more than that:
For some families, they can help insure
a future.
When it comes to estate planning and bequeathing
personal possessions, begin by dusting off
those snapshots. That's what estate attorney
Les Kotzer, author of "The Family Fight:
Planning to Avoid It," tells his clients.
"My mother always said, her greatest
jewels in her life were not in her security
deposit box, but in her photo album,"
he said.
Keep
those images in mind. Adding a line to your
will that directs all of your personal effects,
everything from heirlooms to old love letters,
to your children is not enough. There is
a lot to address and those who neglect to
do so risk tearing their families apart.
Although it might be startling, imagine
those happy faces transmogrified by hurt,
jealousy and greed.
"If
there is going to be a squabble in a family
over anything, it's not likely to be money,"
said Jeffrey Knapp, a Basking Ridge attorney
specializing in estate planning and estate
taxation. And lawyers see the battles firsthand.
"The
fighting is unbelievable," said Kotzer,
who recalls a client smashing a crystal
vase so that no other sibling could have
it. "The fighting it not just over
the money, the fighting is over the memories."
When
it comes to the stuff of life -- bronzed
baby shoes, a grandmother's silver service,
a comic book collection -- irrational emotions
can get the better of people. Kotzer tells
of one client who declared war on his siblings
after his parents' vague bequest of personal
items. "He was not going to let them
go," Kotzer said, because they "smelled
of his childhood."
It
is possible to avoid such complete familial
meltdowns. The first step is to get everyone
talking. That's what Barbara Callan-Bogia
and her siblings did at the request of their
dying mother. "We really wanted to
stay a family," said Callan-Bogia,
author of the booklet "49 Tips For
Determining Who Gets What," but it
wasn't a easy. "We stumbled along the
way," she said.
Reports
of the great fortunes that Baby Boomers
are destined to inherit may be greatly exaggerated.
Some experts put it at $7.2 trillion over
the next 50 years, but others disagree.
A
weak economy and stock market, paired with
a shrinking Social Security safety net and
Americans' increasing longevity, has led
some experts to conclude that most Boomers
won't receive a penny, according to a recent
article in American Demographics magazine.
Such
news would horrify some of Kotzer's clients,
many of whom, as he describes them, are
waiters -- as in waiting for their inheritance.
These are people who are "in hock and
debt, and their salvation is their mother's
inheritance," he said. It might shock
them to know that what they stand to receive
might be nothing more than the family dining
room set.
Frank
talk about legacies, particularly personal
effects, is critical. Ways of bridging the
gap between Depression-era parents and their
adult children is the focus of Kotzer's
book, which, he said, is written in plain
language, not "lawyers' gobbledygook."
If
parents can't get the conversation started,
the children should. "The key is communication,"
Knapp said. "If there are going to
be hard feelings, it is going to arise from
personal property."
Most
families will be able to talk, though roughly
10 percent will not, Callan-Bogia said.
She recommends family meetings or requests
by letter or e-mail from parents to their
heirs asking for their involvement in estate
planning. "If people talk about this,
it goes a long way to avoid the fighting,"
Kotzer said.
And
this way, when the time comes, there are
no surprises. "When you pass, it shouldn't
be Christmas morning," Kotzer said.
The
best advice that lawyers have for people
struggling with bequests of personal property
is straightforward. "Smart people give
it away before they die ," said Joseph
Lambariello, an estate and taxation attorney
in Bridgewater. "That way they know
where it is going."
This
applies to money, as well as the Tiffany
lamp. Individuals are allowed to give $11,000
a year tax-free as gifts to beneficiaries.
Kotzer recommends such "hollowing out"
of an estate if, for example, you want to
reward a devoted child over one who never
calls or visits. That way, there is nothing
for the no-show to get and he is none the
wiser, he said.
Passing
things along earlier can be very satisfying.
"You can see the joy of your children
or loved ones while you are still alive,"
Callan-Bogia said.
The
next best thing is to inventory personal
belongings of financial or emotional value.
Check the list for gifts and return them
to the givers. "Say, 'Take it, it's
yours,'" Kotzer said.
Then,
have antiques and collectibles, such as
coins or Hummels , appraised. Check with
online sources, such as eBay.com, or associations,
such as the American Society of Appraisers
(www.appraisers.org).
Allow
heirs to pick from the inventory list. "Ask
the child, what do they really want, because
they could surprise you," Callan-Bogia
said. No one in her family wanted their
mom's Sebastian miniatures, so they agreed
to sell them and split the profits.
Go
through their wish lists, decide who gets
what and itemize them in a binding memo
that a lawyer can attach to your will.
Or
better yet, let the kids hash it out. Callan-Bogia's
family conducted an auction at which each
sibling was given about $13,000 in fake
money. "I have a desk that I paid $8,000
for with play money, but it felt like $8,000
(real money) when I was bidding against
my siblings," she said.
In-laws,
deemed "outlaws," were banned
from participating, which was probably wise.
"If there is a dispute, it's not necessarily
the siblings going at each other, it might
be the in-laws," Knapp said.
Callan-Bogia
advises establishing firm ground rules.
She tried to loan some faux cash to a brother
and chaos erupted. "You would have
thought I committed heresy," she said.
But in the end, a good time was had. "We
have wonderful stories," she said.
Realistically,
however, there are going to be items that
can't be divvied. A client of Kotzer had
handwritten letters from Joe DiMaggio, Franklin
Delano Roosevelt and a host of famous actors
from the 1940s. "How do you divide
up a letter?" Kotzer said.
Often,
a heart-to-heart talk among siblings is
the only way through to a solution. But
Kotzer doesn't always see sweet endings.
"Never assume good will between children,"
he said. Although, it is possible to force
it from the grave.
Case
in point: Kotzer recalled a terminally-ill
client whose children were at each other's
throats. At the reading of her will, she
had Kotzer hand them family photos capturing
the "little memories of childhood."
Then, he read a letter she had written in
which she reminded them of their once-happy
family life.
The
coldness between them melted, Kotzer said,
particularly after hearing her final words:
"I don't want you kids to fight,"
she wrote. "And remember, I am watching
you."
What
To Do
Be
mindful of who the family givers and takers
are. "People know who cause trouble,"
Barbara Callan-Bogia said. Expect them to
act exactly the same at your death. Caregivers
should be rewarded.
Don't
leave it up to the kids. "In most of
the cases that I see, it's not the kids
that work things out, it's the lawyers,"
Les Kotzer said. "Once you receive
a lawyer's letter from your sibling, it's
not the same. You've broken the bond."
Treat
all kids equally. If a daughter is more
successful than a son, don't leave the personal
stuff to him because you think he needs
it. "What is that saying about the
daughter?" Callan-Bogia said. "That
your memories don't count?
Tell
family members who the executor is. Naming
co-executors isn't always smart. Callan-Bogia
remembers a woman begging her mother not
to do that. "I want to love my sister
when this is over," the woman said.
Let
heirs know how unwanted items should be
disposed.
Be
specific. If leaving something to a son,
name the son. If leaving a piece of artwork,
provide a description and location.
If
there is a chance a bequest will no longer
exist when you die, name a substitute item.
If
you leave, for example, a valuable stamp
collection to one child and the cash equivalent
to another, make provisions to increase
that cash amount if the value of the collection
increases before you die. If you don't,
"you create the exact inequality you
were trying hard to avoid," Kotzer
said.
If
you leave a piano or other hefty gift to
someone living across the country, specify
who pays for the delivery.
If
you leave sophisticated computer equipment
or the like, provide information needed
to use and maintain it.
If
you leave a family business, provide a list
of business partners, the trade shows you
attend, etc.
If
you leave a condo or other real estate,
make sure the recipient can pay the taxes
and maintenance. If the recipient has pets,
be sure they are welcome or the person may
not be able to live there.
When
one parent dies, don't raid the personal
effects. Doing so, you leave the surviving
spouse with an empty house.
If
in a second marriage, don't rely on a stepfamily
to do right by the children of a first marriage.
Protect them in your will. Some combined
families think they are going to be "The
Brady Bunch," Kotzer said, but it doesn't
always work out.
To
protect a second spouse, draw up a list
of who owns what, then sign and date it.
This way, if you leave all your personal
possessions to your kids, they can't leave
the new spouse with nothing.
Beware
of terms such as antiques, memorabilia,
collectibles, etc., as their meanings can
be misinterpreted. "One word can destroy
a family," Kotzer said. He recalled
a woman who left her "antiques"
to her daughter. Her son wanted a blue 1960s-style
clock from his childhood, but the sister
claimed it as antique. They stopped speaking.
Keep
records of who got what, in case there are
questions later. Make recipients sign and
date it. This can head off trouble down
the road.
To
obtain a copy of "The Family Fight:
Planning To Avoid It," by Les Kotzer
and Barry Fish, for $19.95 (shipping included),
call (877) 439-3999 or e-mail leskotzer@hotmail.com.
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