Dividing
the Money (And the Memories)
By Fred Brock
New York Times
Les Kotzer, an estate lawyer in Toronto,
says people should worry more about
saving their families than saving taxes.
"Family
estate fights are not just over money,"
he said. "They're also over memories.
These memories can create such bitter
warfare that family members will sometimes
spend more money on legal fees than
the assets in question are worth."
He
recalls two clients - brothers - who
fought in his office over a Howdy Doody
lunch box in their father's estate.
"One brother said, 'That lunch
box has the smell of my childhood on
it, and I'm not giving it to my brother,'
" Mr. Kotzer said. The other brother
finally relented, but the two parted
on unfriendly terms.
In
another case, two brothers got into
a fight in Mr. Kotzer's office over
a sports trophy that belonged to their
father. One brother threw a heavy law
book at the other, barely missing his
head. Mr. Kotzer sent them to another
lawyer.
Cases
like these prompted Mr. Kotzer and his
law partner, Barry Fish, to write a
book, "The Family Fight: Planning
to Avoid It" (Continental Atlantic
Publications, 2002). It offers common-sense,
plainly written advice that is applicable
in both the United States and Canada,
where the authors practice. The book
is sometimes hard to find in bookstores,
but it can be ordered from Internet
booksellers like Amazon.com and barnesandnoble.com
or from Mr. Kotzer's Web site, (www.familyfight.com).
The book can also be ordered toll-free
at (877) 439-3999. The price is $14.95,
plus shipping.
For
Mr. Kotzer, planning is vital to help
families sidestep acrimony. "Death
is not the only issue that can lead
to family fights," he said. "Someone's
incapacity can also start a family war.
People need to plan for both with a
will and a durable power of attorney."
He
also advises parents to meet with their
children to work out solutions in advance.
"I've never had a parent come to
me and say, 'I want my kids to fight.'
Yet the children end up fighting because
the parents have done no planning or
have planned poorly. They've had no
discussions with their children and
have made some very bad assumptions."
ONE
of those assumptions, he said, is that
children will exercise good will and
settle things amicably. Another is that
everything will be fine if each child
receives an equal share in an estate.
"Parents
should never assume good will among
their children if there have been no
prior agreements or discussions,"
he said. "They should never make
one sibling dependent on the good will
of another sibling. Then it's often
the lawyers who have to work it out.
And once you get lawyers involved, the
relationship between siblings is never
the same."
The
idea that equal shares are fair may
not be fair at all, he said. "If
one child has been a caregiver for years,
would he or she be satisfied with an
equal share?" he asked. "Or
what about if parents have given a lot
more money along the way to one child
than another? Are equal shares fair
then?"
Mr.
Kotzer cited the case of a woman who
had taken care of her mother for years
and had planned to live in the mother's
house after her death. But the mother
left the house equally to the woman
and her brother. The brother wanted
the money, so he went to court and forced
a sale. In the end, his sister was forced
out of a house that her mother had told
her would always be hers.
When
wishes aren't spelled out, problems
can arise from second marriages, too.
"There can be two sets of heirs
with nothing in common," he said.
"They may actually hate each other."
One
of his clients, whose father had remarried,
was from a wealthy family, Mr. Kotzer
recalled. "When the father died,
he left everything to his second wife
with the understanding that she would
leave everything to his son when she
died," Mr. Kotzer said. "But
instead she left everything to her two
children, and my client got nothing.
His stepsiblings won't even let him
see his family pictures, which are now
theirs."
Mr.
Kotzer urges parents to have their financial
records organized to avoid surprises
and family fights. "You can leave
a good will, but still leave a mess
if things are disorganized," he
said. "Keep good records so that
your children aren't so vulnerable to
fighting at a difficult time."
He
also warns against do-it-yourself will
kits, citing the case of a woman who
prepared her own will, leaving her "personal
moneys" to her two sisters and
everything else to her husband. It turned
out that she had some money in checking
and savings accounts, plus hundreds
of thousands of dollars in certificates
of deposit. The husband and the woman's
sisters fought over what "personal
moneys" meant: The sisters asserted
that they included the C.D.'s, while
the husband said they were only the
small accounts. A judge ruled in favor
of the husband, but only after hard
feelings had developed and a lot of
money had been spent on lawyers.
"I
tell people that the most important
assets they have are not in their banks
or safety deposit boxes but in the family
photo album - in the faces of their
children and other loved ones in that
album," Mr. Kotzer said.