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The
Victoria Times Colonist
Estate
of War
Poor
Planning Is The Quickest Way To Rip a Family
Apart
Grania Litwin
Victoria Times Colonist
Do
you have a favourite family photo of everyone
gathered round the Christmas tree, or sitting
down to a steaming turkey dinner? Now imagine
it ripped in half, literally, with two sides
of the clan never speaking to each other
again. That's the picture wills lawyers
Barry Fish and Les Kotzer regularly see
in their Toronto offices, and it's the result
of poor estate planning. "We see the
devastation first hand, and it's getting
worse," says Kotzer, who notes financial
planners look at wills and estates from
the point of view of saving tax. "We
do too, but we also want to avoid family
fights."
In
recent years they have seen a huge increase
in family feuds. People are continually
coming to them, wishing their parents had
done things differently. "Few parents
do what they should to protect their families
from future fights," says Kotzer sadly.
He also hosts a monthly television show
in Toronto focusing on wills and estates
where he receives scores of calls from fighting
relatives, parents not talking to kids,
brothers angry at brothers, step kids furious
with step parents. "It's really horrendous."
Kotzer
and Fish, who have 42 years of combined
legal experience in wills, have just written
a book called The Family Fight, Planning
to Avoid it. They hope it will educate people
about how to avoid inheritance problems,
and spur better communication between parents
and children. "We work in the trenches
so we see what happens when kids are left
picking up the pieces; we see the pain and
anger." One of the main problems is
people make assumptions they shouldn't,
says Fish... "Never assume your kids
won't fight, even if you leave them things
of approximately equal value. Some of the
biggest disputes are over rings, watches,
cars, CD players, china, cabinets, tea cups
. . ." In fact, never assume anything.
They
describe a father who left his RRSP of $200,000
to his son and the rest of his estate, valued
at roughly the same, to his daughter. When
the father died the son went to the bank
and picked up his cheque for a cool $200,000.
The daughter was sent a $100,000 tax bill
which was applied against the estate. "You
can only imagine . . . ."
In
another unfortunate case a father left his
son a coin collection which had been valued
at $15,000, and left each daughter an equal
amount. The problem was, the coin collection
had appreciated dramatically, "One
daughter felt short-changed," The other
didn't, but her husband was furious and
made a big fuss. As Fish explains, "there
are marriages all round, and various personalities,
and one spouse elbows another, which can
put the siblings into difficult positions.
All because somebody decided not to update
their will."
Parents
sometimes inadvertently create tremendous
inequalities. Say a parent assumes their
house is worth $200,000, and leaves it to
one child, while the others receive $200,000
each in cash. When the estate is settled
the house is appraised at $550,000, but
its inheritor refuses to even things up.
"The other children feel slighted.
They may even be furious at the parent,
as well as their sibling. One of the dumbest
things parents do is assume goodwill among
their children. "We see a lot of problems
caused by parents assuming their kids will
work it out," says Kotzer. "Don't
assume that if you have left one child a
little more, that they will share. Even
if a child wants to share, his or her spouse
may not let him. " He described the
case of a child who was in debt. The parent
was afraid if the child inherited a large
sum of cash, creditors would scoop it up.
So they left everything to the other child,
assuming he would share. That didn't happen,
but a family rift did.
Some
people aim to simplify things by leaving
each child a fraction of the entire estate,
but this can be unfair if one child has
been a major caregiver. "It's always
a tightrope: If you treat them equally one
may feel slighted. We had a caregiver walk
into our office at 2 in the afternoon one
day, and leave at 4:30 after crying the
whole time. She had looked after her mother
week after week, month after month. She
did it out of love, but there was some expectation
that there would be some expression of appreciation,
and none came." The treatment she received
may have been unintentional "but the
daughter found it callous, and deeply hurtful."
There
are different laws in various parts of the
country, and the authors have also written
a version for the U.S., but they stress
the book is not geared to any one area.
"The issues are similar all across
the country and what we try to do is give
a birds-eye view, so when you see a lawyer,
you have the background and can save on
fees. We provide an in-depth analysis of
what the lawyer will go through, and real
examples."
Second
marriages can be another can of worms, legally
speaking. "I dealt with a family recently
where the mother died and father remarried
a woman with two children. Father and step
mother always promised everything would
be split equally, no favouritism, like the
Brady Bunch. Dad died and left everything
to step mother, but when she died she left
everything to her own children, including
dad's war medals." The man's son got
nothing and never spoke to his step sisters
again. The experts say even the simple appointment
of an executor can create waves, "especially
if one child gets all the power and turns
into a dictator. "Many people assume
the child with financial experience, or
the one who has taken an accounting course,
should be the executor. That's a false assumption.
It might be better to appoint both children,
or all of them. Parents should ask the kids
if they want to be executors. You'd be surprised
what they will say."
Home-made
wills are another potential horror show,
he said, recalling the case of a woman who
left her siblings her "personal monies"
in the bank. When she died, her two sisters
claimed all the woman's substantial term
deposits, not just the cash in her accounts.
Her husband argued the large deposits were
never intended for them. A fight between
the siblings and husband erupted and finally
the case went to court. "After tens
of thousands in fees, the small bank accounts
went to the siblings, and everything else
to the husband. All that over two words."
Many people get into problems because they
don't fully understood terms like joint
ownership or beneficiary of life insurance,
terms which override what is stated in a
will. "These items are no longer yours
to give, they are already given to someone
else...
"We
had a case of a woman who left everything
equally to her two daughters, but years
back she had named one daughter a joint
owner of a bank account, purely for convenience.
Our client argued that the $20,000 in that
account should also be split, but her sister
declined."
"You
have to bullet-proof your will if you want
to protect your children," says Kotzer,
who added it is also important to be financially
organized, which is why the book includes
a detailed planning list. "You'd be
surprised how many children come in with
a big plastic bag full of papers. They have
no idea about their parents affairs, and
we are not private detectives. It can be
a real mess."
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