|
The
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
Write
A Will Now And Avoid A Family Feud Later
By
Jim Gallagher
The St. Louis Post-Dispatch
The Associated Press provided some information
for this column
Do
you want to start a family feud?
Here's how. Die with lots of money and leave
no will, a confusing will, or a will packed
with surprises.
So say estate lawyers, who make very good
livings arguing over which heir gets what.
The first step is to see a lawyer and get
a will. Do-it-yourself wills are legal in
Missouri and Illinois, if properly done
and witnessed. But putting pen to paper
can cause a major mess after you're gone.
Look what happened to poor Charles Kuralt.
Kuralt, the CBS newsman, became famous for
finding folksy stories in the hinterlands.
In his
wanderings, he also found a close female
friend. He spent lots of time with her over
three decades, much of it at his fishing
retreat in Montana.
As Kuralt lay on his deathbed in 1997, he
put pen to paper. "I'll have a lawyer
visit the hospital to be sure you inherit
the rest of the place in MT," he wrote
his female friend.
Her existence came as a big surprise to
Kuralt's wife of 35 years. She learned of
her rival after his funeral.
Kuralt's scribbling began a two-year court
battle. Courts held that the deathbed note
was enough to override Kuralt's existing
will. His girlfriend got the $600,000 Montana
property, but because of a quirk in the
will's wording, his other heirs got the
tax bill for it.
Lawyers make a mint off such fights. So,
unless you'd like to include a law firm
among your heirs, it's best to take care
of things far in advance.
Rather than scribbling, it's best to see
a lawyer. Wills are cheap. Lawyers advertise
simple wills for $75 in St. Louis. Throw
in some minor consultation and the price
might rise to $200 or $300.
While you're still among us, tell your heirs
who is getting what, and why. That will
head off
arguments that begin with "Mom promised
that table to me, you dolt!"
"It
will avoid more fights than you can imagine,"
says Paul Vogel, a lawyer and president
of
Enterprise Trust in Clayton. "From
what I've seen, the biggest fights are over
personal property, not money."
Missouri law makes dividing personal property
easy, says lawyer Thomas Glick, who chairs
the Bar Association's probate and trust
committee in St. Louis. Just mention in
your will that you're keeping a list of
who gets what. You can keep the list at
home and change it whenever you like, as
long as you sign and date it. The list won't
work for real estate, stocks, bonds, bank
accounts or any cash equivalents.
Not that money is utterly forgotten. Lawyer
Les Kotzer co-authored a book called "The
Family Fight: How to avoid it." It's
a primer on avoiding posthumous squabbles.
He tells of a mother who held $10,000 in
an account jointly with a daughter. When
the mother died, the daughter pocketed the
money. That sent her sister through the
roof. She thought the loot should be shared.
Lawyer Lisa Portnoff sees the same thing
in St. Louis. The old person names one child
as a beneficiary on bank accounts, insurance
policies and other property, thinking he'll
share it with the other kids. Sometimes
they do and sometimes they don't.
Beneficiary designations are a way to avoid
probate costs, but be careful with them.
"They work well as long as you've really
thought through the process," she says.
Speaking of thinking things through, Kotzer
tells of the bowling alley owner who left
his business to one son. The other children
got everything else he owned.
The owner apparently forgot that he'd put
the land under the bowling alley in a different
title. It went to his other children, who
kept raising the rent on the favored son.
Try to make peace before you shuffle off
to the Great Beyond, says Glick. "If
everybody is getting along, things go very
well. If your heirs are not getting along,
see if you can make them get along,"
he says.
Blended families tend to unblend themselves
quickly. "Most of the battles I see
are stepkid-stepparent battles," says
Glick. "If the stepmother gets anything,
it's more than the stepkids
want. If the stepkids get anything, it's
more than she wants."
So, be very clear in your will about how
much goes to your spouse and to each child.
In Missouri, a spouse must receive at least
half the estate, says Glick. You can't disinherit
your spouse unless the spouse agrees to
it in advance. That's usually through a
prenuptial
agreement.
In Illinois, a spouse must get at least
a third if there are surviving descendants,
and half if there are none.
Kotzer, tells the story of a man whose father
died and left everything to his stepmother.
When the stepmother died, she left everything
to her own kids, cutting her husband's son
out of the will.
You can certainly disinherit your adult
children, your crazy cousins and your annoying
brothers and sisters. But if you're going
to cut out a son or daughter, it's good
to put something in the document saying
why, says Vogel.
"Some
people go so far as to leave the kid a dollar,
just so he can't claim he was left with
nothing," said Vogel. That heads off
the claim that you just accidentally forgot
about him.
When cutting someone from a will, lawyer
Glick goes so far as to videotape the will
signing. He'll ask the client questions
- such as the name of the president - to
establish that the client is of sound mind
and knows what he'd doing.
Of course, there's one perfect way to guarantee
family peace after you pass on. "Spend
all your money before you die," says
Glick.
Kotzer's book, published by Continental
Atlantic Publications, is available through
the Web site www.familyfight.com.
|