Follow
Share

I am the last of my “family unit.” I grew up as the youngest of a family of four. Mom, Dad, older brother and me. My father resented us kids and was jealous of the time we took with “his wife.” He was verbally and physically abusive to all of us. My brother and I were both beaten on an almost daily basis by him. We never knew what to expect and never felt safe. As we got older, my brother started taking it out on me too. I spent as much time as possible in my room alone. Our father also never let an opportunity to go by without embarrassing us as much as possible in front of our friends.. I tried to never have friends over. I was just too embarrassed by my family.. although I was 10 when I realized that not everyone got hit every day like us.
Anyway, my brother became an alcoholic and an addict, he never held down a job and his wife and kids lived in our family home without paying any rent or anything to my parents. I did my best to get out and stay out.
When I left my husband and took my daughter, we moved closer to home because my mom was always there for my daughter and I. (On a side note, my father was the first and only person to hit my daughter.) When she was diagnosed with severe ADHD and on the Autism Spectrum, my mom and I discussed it and thought it would be better for us to move home and for me to cut my work hours so that I would have more time with her. I was working 60+ hours a week at the time. I dreaded having her anywhere near my father with his anger issues, or my brother with his alcoholism and drugs, or my niece who was taking after her father at 12 years old. I did my best to keep her away from all of that. We were there for only 4 years. Thank goodness!
Flash forward to recent history. My brother died in his sleep in 2017, my mom lost her battle with leukemia in 2019 and my father just passed this September. I moved in with them after my brother passed to help them and to make sure mom was ok. I stayed for my mom. Not for him.
Everything was left to me. My niece and nephew are now suing me for money that my dad left. They are trying to say that I coerced him into changing the paperwork to make myself the major beneficiary and decrease their share.
I am floored by their selfishness.. in addition, how do you explain to such selfish, self centered people that there is no way you can coerce the man that emotionally and physically abused you your entire life?
I tried explaining to my niece how bad it was when we were young, shortly after my brother passed. She yelled at me that I was being mean the Grandpa. She used him as a cash machine. Two weeks after he was gone she started asking about the will.
I actually felt bad telling her that my father didn’t want her to have anything. He didn’t like her. He laughed at me and said that she would be my problem, he would be gone!


Any suggestions, thoughts?
Have been in such a depression, more over the finality of the loss of my brother and mother. I haven’t really missed my father at all.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Get a good lawyer to represent you. Once the probate on the will is complete - get out and stay out of this web of miserable relationships.
Helpful Answer (9)
Report

I think as you describe this, there is a long, long history of tortured family relationships. The fact that there is a suit here now means you will have to deal with them, but I would do that only through your lawyer, and what estate there is will pay for the suit; hopefully there is a clause written in any will that anyone contesting it will have to be responsible for all court costs.
As to anything else I would no longer have any relationship with any of them. To me, blood is NOT thicker than water. I only have relationships with good and decent people. Life's too short. Wishing you the best going forward and hope the New Year is good.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

Well, what does the will say? My parents wills and mine say that money split between 2 children but if one of those children is dead, their share gets split between their children, if they have any. If no children, that share of the estate goes to the surviving child.

For example, when X dies with 3 living children and 1 deceased with 2 children: child 1, 2, 3 get 25%, 2 grandkids of deceased child get 12.5% each.

But you have to read the will and see exactly how it is worded. If those horrible kids deserve a share according to the will, pay them off and never talk to them again. If the will says they get nothing then give them nothing. And never talk to them again.

Then you should take some time to recover from all this negativity and pamper yourself a bit. Maybe get some therapy so you can rebuild your life and take good care of YOU.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

So is there a will? If there is and he left everything to you, so be it.

Perhaps you could tell her that once mom died, he had to rewrite it because he originally left everything to her. When he rewrote it he left it all to me as his only surviving child. If you think he should have left you something, be mad at him, not me. I spent an entire life not being able to influence what he did, so you can bet how he wrote his will was entirely his own doing.

If niece wants to be mad - be mad at him. And she should be glad for the things he gave her money for while he was alive.
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

You suffered much but are now a surviver.

Your Father's will was how he made it. If it didn't name grands as heirs, so be it.

If the greedy grands wish to waste their time & money trying to money-grab, get a lawyer & let the legal people handle it. Walk away from them.

A previous work colleague had similar. Outlived parents & sibling, entitled niece & nephew came sniffing. Even broke into the recently deceased's empty house to pillage. Didn't lift a finger to help when alive but hand out grabbing when gone was how they were described. Said they'd sue but don't think it got near a court - no case. Now estranged. Shame. Could have had a good relationship with their Aunt... but chose not to. Even said since Aunt had no children it would all come to them one day anyway.

But no. Aunt drew up a watertight will to ensure they will not.

Redmso, leave your niece & nephew behind. Sometimes it is necessary. I hope you can move forward & enjoy your life. You & your daughter. You get to choose who to call 'family' now. May you find uplifting, caring & generous souls 😊
Helpful Answer (7)
Report

I think you best keep your distance from these people and talk to an atty. Probably the one who drew up the will.

No, grandkids are not 'usually' left money by gparents, although, of course, it happens. Usually IF their parent predecease the gparents and the portion of the will that would have gone to the parent is split amongst the remaining grandkids (kids of the deceased parent).

I know if my MIL lives longer than my DH, and that is probably going to be the case, I will inherit nothing. My 5 kids will split my DH's third.

This may be the end of any relationship with the family, and you know what? Maybe that's OK. If it was all about money in the first place, you're better off.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

If your father made a will, you show them the will. If they want to challenge it on the grounds of coercion they'd have to prove it. When was it made?

If your father did not make a will, I imagine that his grandchildren will have some kind of claim on his estate but I haven't a clue what. You'd better take legal advice and make them a sensible offer.

I don't quite understand how you only stayed for your mother, but then stayed living with your father for a further two years after she died. But I'm sorry for all the loss and grief you've had to bear.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

In my opinion, referring them to your attorney for any further contact or questions - would be your best solution to this complicated issue.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

Consult an estate attorney period. Are you the executor? Whether you are the executor or someone else is, do not do anything without consulting an attorney as your father’s will is a legal document and there are legal obligations and ramifications for you if you do not abide by his will. Consult an attorney so you don’t get yourself in legal jeopardy. Protect yourself.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

If your Dad had a will just probate it and do what it says.

It's best not to tell others stuff because they won't believe you anyway.

Whomever is on the Will can be given a copy.

If your nice and nephew are not on the Will, they would still get part of their parents inheritance if their parents are dead.

You do have up to 4 yrs to probate.

if you want the nice and nephew to move out of the house so it can be sold then you will need to probate the Will..

It can take from 6 months to a year to probate a Will but longer if you have people contesting.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report
rovana Dec 2021
Better to talk to a lawyer so you know where you stand. Then cut all contact with these people - they can talk to your lawyer
(1)
Report
See All Answers
This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter