My parents current Will was written 12 years ago, and in said Will are names of people who have since past on..... the way the Will had been written regarding the people listed, the words *their heirs* could be open to interpretation, like finding everyone on all the different family trees... thus heirs my parents never met could inherit some of their estate.
In my parents Will they have each other as Executor of their Will... that was fine and dandy 12 years ago, but today Mom [97] is legally blind and has lost almost all of her hearing. A second Executor was also listed, the attorney who drew up the Wills.... a general practice attorney. My parents had first used him for their real estate closing. Ok, but where is he today?
For the past year I have been hinting to my parents that they need to see an Elder Law attorney and with State laws always changing it is time to update their Wills, POA, etc. Finally got my parents into see an Elder Law Attorney. But Dad has been moving at the speed of molasses on filling out the paperwork for the Trust, which I agree are complex, it's been four months already.
Finally I decided to have the Elder Law Attorney draw up new Wills, POA's, Health Directives, etc. and leave the Trust for another time. My parents got the drafts of said new paperwork last month.... here comes the molasses again... Dad claims he's been too busy to finish reading the drafts [too busy at 93?]. Keeping my finger's crossed my parents sign all the papers this coming Monday.
Lesson learned, get all this stuff done like yesterday. Last year I updated my legal papers, now I can rest easy on my stuff.... still a basket case regarding my parents.
In my area, the doctor offices and all the hospitals are patient-computerized, thus info can fly back and forth.... the closet hospital to me already scanned a copy of my Living Will and DNR the last time I had a hospital stay, they had requested said info. Talk about timing, I never expected to be in the hospital for a stay and here I had signed all my updated legal paperwork just days prior.
My dad has some strange ideas that she talked him out of. But she has just moved away, so I need to find another.
I handled everything for him
Re mum's illness, death, funeral and estate.
But it took a lot out of me.
I think he would make me executor, and I am well aware what that entails (not looking forward to sibling dramas, but I am tough old nut, they don't scare me;)
I don't care about his money. I just know I'll be a mess when he dies, so all I want are his wishes all tidy in an envelope safe so we can all relax and enjoy dad's last years. Then when the inevitable happens the settlement of the estate will not shred me and my siblings to pieces.
Maybe I should write this down in a letter to him. Or just make the damn appt for him.
POA can be rescinded by the person who had it written up. Also, null and void upon death. Its there for someone to help the person not keep them from spending.
He died last November. NOW.... I have to get a new will. Problem is I have no one to name. No family, I lost all my friends while caregiving. I trust very few people. I have no idea who to name....Durable Power of Attorney, or on my bank accounts, or house, or car, or....I am lost. But I am so glad HE had the sense to get a will done.
My own parents are wealthy. All our lives there has been manipulation regarding and implying "You better do what we want or you might be written out". I think that is awful. My husband and I both have striven to be self sufficient and prepare for our retirement independently, and see anything as 'gravy'. Money can be a terrible curse, causing terrible strife in families. I think the best gift we can give to our offspring is to be able to promise them 'you will never have to pay a cent of your own money or be forced to bring me into your home to take care of me'. We have a blended family and I am sure whatever we do, someone will be upset. But we for sure have written it down, chosen the 'one' who will be our POA if we cannot do that for each other, have it all legal and locked away in a safe deposit box, which we have made known to the one who will, with our attorney, put everything 'to bed' when we are both gone. We plan to have fun having worked very hard and will not eat cat food in our 'golden years'. The term 'estate' used to really mean, ESTATE. Land that was kept in the family particularly to provide farming income to support that family. It was worked. Now our 'estates' can equal, in the minds of some, a free handout payday. We made sure all our kids got decent educations and helped them get good starts in life. It is not our job to make up for blowing money rather than saving it or refusing to defray any luxuries like we had to if they cannot afford them now. Some have learned the lesson better than others, but that is up to them now as adults.
As for POA's, you do NOT have to have the agreement of a POA to rescind it. Any person of sound mind can rescind it any time they want to. So if parents are POA for each other but become unable to act, the parent who IS of sound mind can just appoint someone else.
When my Dad died, Mom redid her will. As one of 3 children, I'm executor because I live near Mom. I also have a POA and Medical POA with my daughter who is an RN. When it comes to Wills it goes by state. No will causes a number of problems. If there r children the wife only gets a percentage and the other percentage goes to the children. The state taxes when no will. We updated our will once the girls were adults. I feel for u that parents have ailments that keep them from making informed decisions. Good Luck.
Last time I talked to Dad he was gun-ho for signing the documents on Monday. Not sure about Mom, I just hope she will follow Dad's cue that it is important to have all this signed. Mom is still sharp as a tack, but doesn't come across that way because of her hearing issues.
The law firm I am using will not allow someone to sign if they feel that the person doesn't understand what they are signing. The attorney has met with my parents twice for two long sessions, so she understands their wishes. Just keeping my finger's crossed.
I really wishes Dad would have worked on the paperwork for the Trust, as I really dread if my parents pass as their estate is very complex. Their new Will has my Mom as Executor, and me second in line. I would probably hire the firm to deal with my parents estate. I am pushing 70 years old, only child, too emotionally exhausted to concentrate on this stuff :P
Advance directives/living will should also be completed. It doesn't matter if you are 18 or 93, it needs to be done. Anything can happen in an instant; a stroke, a car accident etc. that can change a life. I recommend everyone complete the forms,
Be very careful on how both are worded.
It can be made very vague and open to interpretation, or very specific to make sure your parents wishes are honored exactly the way they wanted them.
If you are the successor trustee, make sure to update the trust every couple of years, as laws change, and may leave your trust wide open to new laws.
My Great Grandparents, who practically raised me from birth to 5 were wealthy. When they passed it went to my paternal Grandparents who had 3 sons. When they passed son #3 got 1/3, he helped his kids with school, cars, homes. Son #2 was deceased, so his 2 sons got his share, (where it would have gone anyway since he was loaded). They are good boys and will use it to secure a good future for their children, so that's neat. Son #1 is my Dad, he remarried 10 years ago. He and the new wife are spending it with abandon, brand new super high dollar cars, giving gifts to her kids, etc. The plan is that when Dad goes she will get it all, (as though she was wife #1 of many years), then when she goes it will all be divided equally by her 4 kids and I. Nice hugh? I've never met any of her kids, none of my Grandparents ever met any of her kids, they got their own inheritance from their Father already, ...? So basically the lives of 23 people were greatly enhanced, with me, (being the 3 oldest direct relative), being completely cut out. I was a fave or Great Grandparents as well as Grandparents who always said I was in their will, so I know for sure this isn't what they wanted, but there really isn't anything I can do about it.
When my Big Sis died she had put in her will that she wanted her car to go to our Stepdad, he'd floated her a personal loan for it and it wasn't repaid, so she wanted him to take the car and sell it, pay himself back. She had 2 large dogs, one newly adopted, that didn't get along with the older one. She wanted the newly adopted one to go to an Uncle who used to have a similar breed. He'd agreed behind the scenes to consider it when I asked him towards the end. I know he would have taken him in when I'd shown him the will. But my welfare queen, gold digger druggie niece showed up on the scene in Sis's last few days, and the will my Sis had made and just gone over disappeared. Niece begged for the car, said it was rightfully hers, convinced Mom and Stepdad to give it to her. (She beat it, wrecked and abandoned it-the cops called me to see who it belonged too.) No insurance, hadn't even titled it. Poor dogs got kept together in an outdoor kennel without the will that spelled it out, they're still not getting along, I feel for the newer one who's getting his butt kicked all the time by the older grumpy one. He could be a happy only dog on a farm in Iowa with great owners.
As for my Mom and Stepdad, (married 30 years), I am their only child. Yet Stepdad's big brother and nephew are always talking about what items belonging to my parents they expect to "inherit". (?) I've told them I don't care if it all goes to charity, make a stupid will! Will they listen? Nope! I dunno, I don't want heirlooms of mine going to gold diggers, or the pawn shop, so sure don't know why they would. I've spelled out certain items, and given notice on paper to little cousins, my heirs, and their parents so family items and my valuables stay in family hands. I know I could get clobbered in traffic tomorrow, so don't understand what the big deal is spelling a few things out to make it easier for everyone else. (?)
DPOA and POA, living wills, all of that. If the will is basically sound and those things are updated it shouldn't be all that bad. If it isn't that much money to worry about, although ideally the 'heirs of heirs' is not really great, it is a lot more important to make sure someone can act on their behalf in end of life situations.
Most people (7 out of 10 according to the U.S. Dept of HHS) will need some type of care and someone needs to have the ability to help step in and advocate for their needs. Take some smaller steps, and I would focus on getting the tools in place to help them while they are still here first.
Best wishes.
Neither of my parents even had wills (despite me trying EVERYTHING including colluding with mum to get a recommended will writing service guy come round 'to write mum's' in the hope he'd nab dad at the same time.
Dad is a nightmare. Says 'it doesn't matter because everything will go to your mother'
'What if you are both in a car accident?'
No response. My father, even when younger, always had a problem with the concept of writing a will.
I asked him gently why, was it because it was facing mortality? He said no and shut down the subject.
Mum 'started' to write hers, but it gathered dust.
Then mum died last year, intestate.
LUCKILY I dealt with the somicitor for dad and it was a fairly straightforward one as her half of the house passed to him, and she hardly had any savings (lots of low value ISAs and Life Insurance policies.. that was hard administrative working making sense of boxes of paperwork in envelopes spanning 30 odd years!)
So I got the lively lady solicitor to 'order' dad to come back in to write his will (she said she often saw husbands not live long after their wives die... I can see my dad dwindling in spirit in front if my eyes)
Yet he STILL makes any excuse not to write it!
I've shown him reports of what happens in probate cases, I've tried to appeal to the father in him saying none of us are going to be in a fit state to go through that when he passes (it would be left to me as 4 of my siblings are not up to dealing with all the paperwork at the best of times, and they have trust issues with my brother who could be of use as he has track record of dishonesty and self serving.
I have told my dad I have written a will (saying tgat this article reminds me to update it as the guardians for my son are now on the brink of divorce!!!)
I'm going to try to print out some more info from the internet about the importance of this. Leave it at his and hope he reads it!
I just need to burst into tears I think. Takes a lot to get through to my dad. And at 89 he gets SO easily overwhelmed, so I do understand how daunting it is for him.
He knows this is not anout money, but to try to prevent the chaotic aftermath of him dying intestate.
Now the lovely lady solicitor has left, so that does not help (he seemed to enjoy her brand of bossiness)
Old men... can't even lead that horse to the water!!!
Any tips gratefully received.