Newsday
Dividing
An Estate Among the Children a Delicate Balancing
Act
Eileen
Alt Powell
Associated Press
By
Janet Kidd Stewart
Special to Your Money
We all gasped at the infighting over the Pritzker
family's Hyatt fortune and puzzled over Bill Gates'
vow to leave the majority of his wealth to charity,
not his kids.
Of
course, none of us would go toe-to-toe with our
cousins over Grandma's 60-piece set of Haviland
china. And no one of more modest means would think
of cutting out the kids in favor of a cause. Right?
Ahem.
Consider the siblings who engraved their names on
their parents' possessions before their deaths,
or the woman who smashed a crystal vase in a parking
lot so no one else could have it. Or the aunt who
was a no-show at her niece's wedding because of
bad blood with her brother over division of an estate.
"There
are far too many instances where apologies are simply
not enough to resolve what becomes a very deep and
lasting conflict,'' attorney Les Kotzer wrote in
"The Family Fight: Planning to Avoid It,''
an estate planning book that includes these tales.
Kotzer
promoted the book last year on radio call-in shows
and heard hundreds more stories.
The
meek may inherit the Earth, but apparently the cabin
in South Haven goes to the bold.
Jayme
Simoes, a New Hampshire public relations executive,
watched relationships virtually disintegrate in
a 20-year standstill over several family homes in
Portugal that sit in a trust requiring all parties
to agree on a split before it can be passed down.
"Because
of the fighting, and delays, the houses are in very
rough shape, many beyond repair,'' Simoes said.
"The longer we wait the more money will be
needed to save the houses. I hope that eventually
we will all see the madness of this.''
Isn't
there a better way? Mixing family, death and money
is a prescription for volatility, but can you stave
off hurt and anger when divvying up the goods?
Many
parents cling to a share and share alike mentality,
but is that really best if one child is far wealthier?
Tread
carefully if you plan to leave unequal amounts to
your heirs, cautioned Eileen Gallo, principal of
The Gallo Institute in Los Angeles, which counsels
families on estate issues.
"Children
often equate inheritance with love, so if parents
are choosing to not treat children equally in an
estate, they should talk with their kids about the
reasons why,'' Gallo said.
"We
counseled one couple who was very wealthy,"
she said. "The wife's brother had lobbied his
parents to leave [the sister] out of the will, and
of course she was upset because she felt penalized
for success.'' Gallo said.
Sometimes
obvious circumstances--gambling or drug addictions--dictate
an unequal split. But when the lines blur, relationships
can hang in the balance.
David
Heetland, a pastor at Garrett-Evangelical Theological
Seminary in Evanston, also is a certified financial
planner and father of two adults in their 20s.
He
wrestles competing instincts of splitting his inheritance
equally between them or giving a substantial amount
to charity and dividing the rest according to need.
And he takes to heart the biblical story of the
prodigal son, who squanders his inheritance but
is forgiven.
"What
stands out in the parable for me is that God's gifts
are not earned,'' said Heetland, 55.
For
now, he plans to give at least 10 percent of his
estate to charity and split the rest evenly between
his kids, who are close in age and in financial
circumstances.
He
hopes that through his example of giving and his
spiritual beliefs, his kids will be at peace with
any redistribution of money if circumstances change.
"I
hope that by the time my estate plan is in place,
I will have a better understanding of how much will
help them to be responsible stewards and how much
might be harmful to this goal and to their own self-worth.
I know for sure that I won't leave everything to
them, because I also want to express appreciation
to those institutions that have been important to
me.''