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The
Sun Sentinel
Where
There's A Will, There's A Family Drama
By
Ralph De La Cruz
Last
week, ABC announced it was coming out with
the next generation of reality programming
-- a show called The Will, in which family
and friends compete for the largest cut
of a millionaire's fortune.
If
people will eat worms and walk on broken
glass for $50,000 (Fear Factor), think what
they might do if a fortune's at stake.
Think
about what they might be capable of doing
if they knew all the emotional hot buttons
of their competitors, all their weaknesses
and desires.
Les
Kotzer can't wait. He's on a mission to
get people to talk openly about wills, and
he thinks this show will put the subject
on the table.
Kotzer
is an estate lawyer. He helps people write
their wills. But unlike most estate lawyers,
who concentrate mainly on how to minimize
the tax hit, Kotzer's emphasis is on how
to keep families from being destroyed by
squabbling over an inheritance.
"Over
the last five years, we've seen the problem
get worse," Kotzer says. "I think
it has to do with Baby Boomers and their
consumption habits."
Kotzer
has all sorts of stories of family conflict.
"And
it's not always over money," he says.
Sometimes
the tangles are about keepsakes that might
have been promised but not included in the
will. Or about power and control: who was
named executor, and how they're carrying
out their role.
"Parents
have watched their family for years laughing
and having a good time over Thanksgiving
dinner, and they make the assumption that,
after they die, their children will have
good will toward each other," Kotzer
says. "That can be a devastating assumption."
Kotzer
has seen siblings throw things at one another
in his office. And destroy relics so no
one else would have them.
"One
woman brought a knapsack into my office
and told me, 'Give this to my brother,'"
Kotzer recalls. "When he opened it,
it was filled with shredded and ripped pictures,
mementos, letters the kids had sent from
camp."
Kotzer,
who has put together anecdotes and relationship-saving
strategies in a book, The Family Fight:
Planning to Avoid It ($19.95, Continental
Publications; www.familyfight.com), offers
the following suggestions:
Have
an honest discussion among family members
while everyone's still alive about the will
and who will be the executor. If there's
more than one child, you may want to appoint
all of them executors, with a provision
that would allow decisions to be made based
on what the majority favor.
Outside
from the will, assign a durable power of
attorney to a family member or friend, which
would let them make decisions about health
care and property -- in the event you become
too sick to make those decisions yourself.
Make
sure your will is updated. Kotzer tells
a story of a woman who made her son executor
and bequeathed a diamond ring to her daughter.
Only problem was that the ring had been
lost years earlier, but the will was not
updated. As a result, the daughter thought
her brother was simply refusing to give
her the ring and claiming it was lost. A
set-up for conflict.
Be
aware that bank accounts and property that
are under joint ownership are separate from
the rest of the will. Upon the death of
one joint owner, it automatically reverts
to the surviving owner.
Consider
giving some of the inheritance away while
you're still alive. You control how it's
handled and there's less to bicker over
later.
Think
long and hard about cutting someone out
of a will. If you have a child who's an
addict or a spendthrift, think about setting
up a trust that would offer a steady income
rather than one lump sum.
Consider
leaving a videotaped message explaining
your decisions.
Talk
about reality TV.
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