Posted on 12/06/2001 5:57:08 PM PST by JD86
If you die tomorrow, what does your family need to know today? (Lawyer Needs Freeper Help)
I'm an attorney who helps clients with estate planning and other money matters, but I won't claim that I "know it all". I need Freeper advice.
I once had an elderly client who always told his family "When I die, everything you need is in the manila folder". When he died, we searched high and low but we never did find that folder. As a result, it took years to settle his estate.
That shouldn't happen. I am putting together a booklet for my clients - a checklist of sorts - to help them keep track of important family information.
I'm asking for your suggestions. What would you include in such a checklist?
First - the practical. Doctor's name, where's the will, your desires regarding any minor children ... what else?
Second - the emotional. Would you tell your children you are proud of them? To stop smoking? Dump their lousy mate? What else?
Is there anything you would change about what your parents did? Have you made a checklist yet? If so, what's on it?
Also, if you are incapacitated but don't die, what then?
I have a client who has all her medications listed and taped to the inside of her kitchen cabinet and all her family knows where to find it. Do you have any other ideas like that?
Thanks to all in advance for your suggestions. Please post or send me FreeperMail.
Thanks for a wonderful post. You have covered lots of things that are very important. I would like to comment on this last part. An Irrevocable Trust is good in many instances, but not all. There are other ways to handle the situation, including A-B Trusts like another poster mentioned or Family Limited Partnerships. All of these have good points and bad points and the law is different in each state. I recommend that everyone talk to an attorney in their state....tell the attorney what you want to accomplish...and then let them tell you the best vehicle to use in your state.
Another point is about "in-laws". Unfortunately, you are right that not all marriages last forever. Per stirpes is a wonderful phrase. It means to follow the blood line...so if I leave something to my son and he and I are killed in the same car accident, his part would go to his daughter, not to his wife. Something to think about.
This is an excellent point. Guns, as well as any family heirlooms, special things, should be mentioned specifically to make sure they get to the person you want to have them. Also, as we get older ourselves, there is no reason not to pass some things along while we are still here. My father calls that "giving with warm hands". That way you get to see your loved ones enjoy the gift.
No comments whatsoever on how the children run their lives; if a parent does the proper job it's none of his business at that point.
My only caveat here is that it would depend somewhat on the ages of the children. Once they are adults, I would agree with you. Our job as parents is to prepare them for launch into their own lives, and then let them live them. However, since I raised my sons on my own, each year while they were growing up I would write a letter and put it with my will, telling them my hopes and dreams for them, reminding them how special they are. Fortunately, mine are now grown, but I think the letters would have helped if I had died while they were still young.
Thanks so much for providing this service. Since I'm at work right now, I've only had a chance to read through the first 50 posts and they have really given me food for thought!
This may already have been mentioned, but in the case of a second marriage where the deceased is the biological parent of children that have refused any contact with their parent, it is essential to stipulate in a Will what portion, if any, is to be left to those children. If it is the intent of the parent to leave nothing, it should be stated in the Will with an explanation as to why. This will save the surviving spouse the further grief of having to deal with children they have never met who show up just to see what they can get.
Good Luck! Can't wait to get back later and read more.....
Thanks for your candor...:) You probably have lots of company on this thread and you have helped them more than you know.
Thanks. This is an important point that has not been mentioned. I would like to add my personal opinion about inheritances. I truly believe that no one owes anything to anyone in their will. I am not talking about minor children who you have a responsibility to provide for, I am talking about your brothers and sisters, your adult children. I believe in those cases inheritances are gifts, and that you should give those gifts to the people you want to have them. As dansangel has pointed out, you may not want to leave anything to a particular person...maybe you haven't seen them in twenty years...maybe they just aren't a nice person...or maybe they gamble and you know they would throw the money away. It doesn't matter what the reason is, it is your money, your inheritance give it to whomever you want. I would make two suggestions for you to discuss with you own attorney: How to make it clear that you are leaving the person out . And, talk to your attorney about a No Contest Clause. I use them all the time. It means the people can either say Thank You for what you did leave them, or they get nothing if they contest the Will. That may sound harsh but it stops alot of fights before they start.
I know that it's important to have deeds of Graves, in our family that had been a problem - and hard to resolve at the last minute... also, I learned graves can be reused (sounding of the grave?) so families can continue to be buried in a family plot.
Well, I have fleeting knowledge of this stuff, but I do remember watching the 'adults' in my life panicky and fighting over cemetary plots.
That is so true! I have had relatives who on their "death bed" told us who could ride in the FIRST CAR etc (ha) It went along with how funny they were in life, at literally their last minutes, having it their way!
We had an aunt who after her two sisters died, had a few of us cousins go BUY her a GRAVE in a certain cemetary, she wanted a "view, a nice TREE nearby..and maybe a stream" No kidding...and guess what! We found one,she was happy (she wasn't dying but had been ill) She died about a year later and at the prayers at the grave we looked around and saw she got what she wanted.
The strangest experience is shopping to buy someone something to be Buried in. WE had to do that too, for a diff aunt...and without meaning to we would horrify the salesclerk, since of course no one was "trying it on" and it's purpose etc.
Another point about this is what people want to be buried with....personally I'd rather leave my jewelry and my Bible to my granddaughter but I have seen some people buried with them. You never know what a person wants to do, until you ask.
It's gone forever then, and it could be a wonderful family treasure to be handed down, and cherished.
We have had the kids in the family draw pictures to "grandma/grandpa" - and a family picture, a note of love...
It's very personal, and also if people want to be buried with their jewelry...they should know that it could be stolen, once the family leaves the cemetary.
This is a great idea. I had a friend tell me about his father's funeral. It seems that during his father's life he was everyone's confidant, children, adults. And he had a way of getting people to share their secrets with him. When anyone had a problem they couldn't talk about, he would tell them to write it on a little note and put it in his pocket...and he would carry their trouble for them. He evidently did this all his life. The family knew that he did it with them, especially the children, but they didn't know how far his influence reached. At the wake, my friend said he noticed that the pockets in his father's suit were bulging. When he invetigated, he found them full of little notes. People had been going up to the casket and leaving him a note, one last time.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.