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They were recently discharged with fluid on the brain. I am/was the caregiver for both of my maternal grandparents. My grandma recently passed away from end stage kidney cancer with brain mats. She was hospitalized with fluid on her brain and swelling in January of this year. She was also suffering from severe personality changes, including, depression, extreme irritation, paranoia, delusions, memory loss, headaches, as well as what I categorize as “being a completely different person." One instance of that would be accusing my grandpa of carrying on an affair with someone from church. Anyone who knows my grandparents knows she would never say or think such a thing as they have been happily married for 40 years. Two years prior to her death my grandparents took me to a lawyer and made me their full durable POA, as well as their full medical proxy. At that time both grandparents updated their wills. Grandma made me the executor on her will and named me, and her two sons each 1/3 of her estate. She did not want to include her daughter (my mother) because my mom had been named the only child out of the three children that my grandma shared with her first husband to receive a pretty substantial inheritance when my grandpa (from first marriage) passed. She told me it was only fair that the boys weren’t included in their dad’s will that my mom be left out of hers. Not necessarily left out, but she felt mom was already set. I will mention now that mom and grandma have always had a rocky relationship. My grandma told me, "Please never put your mother in charge of my healthcare or my business.” This context relating to my mom possibly pulling the plug on my dad two years earlier. She was leaving me one third, because I was the one taking care of them from day one. She and my grandpa would call all day, every day sometimes. Grandpa still does and its ok, I’m happy to do this for them as they raised me from the age of 9. My Uncle M. is 66 and bipolar and has numerous other issues and not the highest I.Q. Not being insensitive, just saying. Grandma has basically supported him his whole life up until she died. She left the remaining third to her other son. After making this will she later decided it would just be me and the uncle she took care of because she had given the other uncle 70 acres of land and a house. She actually sold it to him, he was to pay $1000 a month and only ended up making one payment. The courthouse has the property signed over as a gift, however change was never updated in the will. Fast forward to March of this year. Grandma was getting worse. Episodes were pretty far out. I was doing 80 percent of her care as well as my grandpa and my mom did help with dropping off food, etc. In April I started leaving to go to Texas to see my husband. He is currently there working, so I went to do his laundry and grocery shopping, etc. All with a four year old in tow. My mother would help check on them while I was away. My husband worked their five months. I was there a total of two and a half weeks (spread out over the five months). My husband's motor went out in his truck so I had to drive another vehicle over until he got it fixed. I asked my mom to check in on my grandparents and to have her pick up my niece who I also watched after school, she agreed. While I was gone she took my grandma to her personal lawyer (who she used for my dad's succession as well as his parent's succession) and my grandma wrote a handwritten will the states, I leave my daughter, her name, as executor of my will and all of my property. Dated and signed. The lawyer had my grandpa, my uncle, my mom’s boyfriend and one other person. I don’t think grandma should have signed that as her mental competence was questionable. She was matriarch, so sometimes it was just easier to go along with it. She died three weeks later. What can I do about proving she should not have been signing documents? My grandpa got his money back from the shared lawyer and is looking for new council. I have gotten the medical records. Now what?

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Depending on what state you're in the specific laws and regulations, there may not be much you can do. In many states, if not most, a person need only have a single moment of lucidity to sign a Will. They don't even have to remember doing it 30 seconds later. Yes, it can be handwritten in some states. And, as long as it follows all the other rules of validity, such as being notarized and/or filed in probate court, whatever that state requires, it stands.
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Reply to mommabeans
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Prayers sent.
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Reply to Llamalover47
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Nope, an attorney WOULD NOT have 5 signatures on a document instead of notarized with 2 witnesses.

Go to the probate court and contest the validity of the will and produce the old will and medical records proving grandma's condition.

As far as leaving the 2nd son out, you can not do that, grandma's will has to be probated as written, once you prove that the will mom provided isn't valid, if possible.
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Reply to Isthisrealyreal
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I agree with what cwillie said about interviewing her for competency. If she was actually taken to an attorney it most certainly would not have been a handwritten Will. Additionally, it would have been notarized right there in the attorney's office with 2 non-family members as the witnesses. This is pretty standard procedure for a Last Will. Your Mom's story sounds very fishy. Very.

If I were you I'd consult an elder law attorney and find out what s/he thinks you should do at this point. It may vary by state, and there may be info and details they need more than what you've supplied here. Plus, we're not attorneys.
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Reply to Geaton777
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A competent layer would have questioned your grandmother about the terms of the will to judge her competency and done so in private to ensure no undue influence, it's not clear to me what has really changed in this new will other than removing you as executor.
They say that the only ones who win in this kind of legal battle are the lawyers, I suppose if you feel you've been screwed over the draining of the estate to pay legal fees may not matter to you but you should know that if you lose you may be asked to pay their legal fees.
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Reply to cwillie
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You could see a lawyer to find out if this was done legally. A handwritten will may not be legal in that state. Or it might. As far as proving grandma shouldn't have been signing documents, that might be difficult or impossible to do. A lawyer who is overseeing the signing of documents assesses the competence of his client to do so. Presumably that was done in your grandmother's case.

If grandma actually went to a real lawyer's office, why wasn't the will typed instead of handwritten? Was it notarized? Were there witnesses? Where is the original will? What are the laws of that state regarding all this?

A lot of this seems fishy. I'm not sure you got the true story.
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Reply to Fawnby
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