|
The
Orange County Register
It's
Time To Talk Turkey About Estates And Wills
By
Jane Glenn Haas
The Orange County Register
We
all know people like the free-spending boomer
couple who drove up to attorney Les Kotzer's
East Coast office in a leased Jaguar. Their
posh home is mortgaged to the hilt. They
have no money in the bank.
"So
what do you do for a living?" Kotzer
asked the guy.
"He's
a waiter," his wife said. "He's
waiting for his inheritance."
Kotzer,
a boomer himself, has little patience with
some of these "waiters."
Estate
planners figure trillions of dollars will
change hands as Depression-era parents die
and boomers come into their carefully saved
money.
Too
often, when inheritance time rolls around,
they squabble over money and family stuff.
They fight with siblings and other relatives.
They fracture families.
"And
usually because their parents - with all
good intentions - failed to spell things
out in a will," he says.
He
has horror stories by the bucketful:
The
patient, caregiving daughter who was promised
the family home but didn't get it because
Mama forgot, left everything equally and
relied on the good will of her brothers
and sisters.
The
blood son cut off by a stepmother who inherited
a father's estate that made no provision
for his own child.
The
divorce that splits a son's marriage but
never shows up in the will that still leaves
jewelry to the wife.
The
message to parents is clear: Never assume
when it comes to money.
The
message to adult children is equally obvious:
Talk this stuff over with your parents.
In
fact, with family holiday gatherings fast
approaching, a little estate-planning talk
could be the best intergenerational gift
of the season.
In
their book, "The Family Fight - Planning
to Avoid It," Kotzer and his partner,
Barry Fish, focus on avoiding fights instead
of tax planning.
On
their Web site, www .familyfight.com, family
members have posted tales of inheritance
terror.
Don't
like the idea of your kids fighting over
your antiques? Establish who gets what and
let everyone in on the plans.
Years
ago, my grandmother made a list of her best
"stuff" and rotated the list among
her five children. The eldest got first
pick and so on until all the items were
distributed on paper well before her death.
Kotzer
applauds that approach. He also encourages
talking over who's in charge of the money.
"Few
attorneys will ask you if you've talked
over with your children who is going to
be executor, for example," Kotzer says.
"Communication is the key."
Their
book is a practical guideline for things
like how to pick an executor, when to use
a trust, why you shouldn't write your own
will.
"You
may have the best intentions in the world,"
they write, "but unless those intentions
are expressed clearly and with precision
in a will, you are creating a risk that
your family might come up with two different
versions of your true intentions, and this
can express itself in a family dispute."
I
know, you don't want to talk about money
and your kids don't want to know you expect
to die - particularly at holiday times.
Just
get a copy of "The Family Fight"
and read the chapter on "inheriting
turmoil." Then bring your estate to
the table along with the turkey.
"The
Family Fight" is $19.95 and is available
through www.familyfight.com or phone 1-877-439-3999
toll-free.
|