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The
Toronto Star
Wills
Can Leave A Bitter Legacy
Poor planning, vague bequests may lead to family feuds, lawyers
warn
Janice
Mawhinney
Toronto Star
Where
there's a will, there's a war that seems to be the
case in several high-profile family feuds over the ample assets
of deceased celebrities.
Picasso's
three natural children battled with his widow and legitimate
children for years in court before receiving a share of his
estate, which altogether was worth hundreds of millions of
dollars.
Frank
Sinatra's three children sued his widow, his fourth wife,
who was left a multimillionaire at his death, when she was
slow ensuring that they received the $200,000 and personal
items left to each of them.
Former
Playboy Playmate Anna Nicole Smith recently won an $88.6 million
victory in a complex legal battle with her stepsons over the
estate, estimated at more than $1 billion, of her late husband
of 14 months. The Texas oil tycoon had wheeled into the bar
where she was a topless dancer. The pair wed in 1994, when
she was 26 and he was 89.
But
you don't have to be rich and famous to die leaving a will
that will leave your family members at each other's throats.
Thornhill
lawyer Les Kotzer once sat in his office boardroom watching
a man throw a book at the head of his brother. The book didn't
injure the brother, but it did knock a painting off the wall.
It
occurred to Kotzer that the parent's will that created the
falling-out between brothers could have been more carefully
prepared. Family members could have been consulted. And perhaps
a serious family fight could have been avoided.
Wills
that have been prepared without considering all the circumstances
"are ticking time bombs," says Kotzer. "The
explosions and rifts that result can last for generations."
Of
course, he hastens to add, failing to make a will is not going
to lead to a desirable situation, either.
If
you don't have a will, your same-sex partner or your common-law
spouse will inherit nothing.
"The
government will write your will for you," observes Kotzer.
"Not having a will is a big recipe for a family fight.
The law doesn't favour the caregiving child, and gives just
as much to the child you haven't seen in 20 years. It doesn't
give your best friend anything. This situation is a real mess."
Kotzer,
with his law partner Barry Fish, wrote a book full of do's
and don'ts and cautionary tales about wills. The book, based
on their professional experiences, is called The Family Fight:
Planning To Avoid It.
One
day, five brothers and sisters came calmly into the law office
to talk about the estate of a sister who had died.
"There
was one take-charge brother with a briefcase, and he said
the sister's assets were a house, a car and a few bank accounts,"
Kotzer recalls.
The
sisters asked about the jewelry they had seen. He replied:
What jewelry? The sisters said she had much more than he was
reporting and demanded that he open his briefcase. He refused.
"They
began to scream at each other and pound on the desks,"
Kotzer says. "They yelled for half an hour out in our
parking lot. We never heard from them again."
Choosing
whom to give legal responsibility for power-of-attorney for
health and for property, and executorship of a will is critically
important, he advises. Ensuring that you have the legal papers
to cover these things is, too.
"If
the children have no legal power, then when mother becomes
incapable, the government of Ontario becomes the guardian
of your property," Kotzer says.
It's
best to talk over these matters openly with family members,
to make sure that people's attitudes are as clear as possible.
Don't assume that the oldest child, or the child who is best
in math, wants the responsibility. Don't assume that any one
person is best for the job to the exclusion of others. It
is possible to make joint appointments.
"Appoint
someone you trust," Kotzer says.
With
the medical power-of-attorney, it helps if you can appoint
someone who lives close to you and to carry a card with this
information in your wallet.
When
choosing an executor, talk to those around you, take great
care, and consider whether co-executors might me more appropriate.
Kotzer
remembers a case in which the oldest son was the sole executor
of a parent's will.
"In
front of my partner and me, he asked his siblings to leave
the room. They did, reluctantly. That was the beginning of
the demise of that family.
"They
loved the family cottage and he hated it. They would rather
have the cottage than the money. He insisted on selling it.
It was sold.
"This
kind of thing goes very deep."
In
preparing a will, he advises, it's better to try to save a
family than to save taxes.
In
one family, the mother had a joint bank account containing
$20,000 with one of her two daughters, in order to avoid probate
tax. The will left everything equally to the two daughters,
but the sister with the joint account claimed that the entire
$20,000 was hers.
'Parents are often the masters of the destruction of their
own family'
The
other woman felt betrayed, Kotzer says. "For $20,000,
she's not going to go to court, but she'll never speak to
her sister again."
Don't
write individuals temporarily out of a will to teach them
a lesson, Kotzer says. You can't be sure you will ever have
the opportunity to write them back in, and the family reverberations
could be devastating and long-lasting.
"Parents
are often the masters of the destruction of their own family,"
Kotzer says. "It's heartbreaking."
Homemade
wills sometimes work, but have the potential for unexpected
problems, he suggests. And they are easier to challenge in
court than lawyer-made wills.
In
Ontario, homemade wills are unlikely to have the family law
clause that keeps willed property from being shared with estranged
in-laws, he says. "It means the money grown from the
inheritance is fair game for your separated son-in-law or
daughter-in-law."
Talking
the contents of a will over with family members, and making
it clear where all the assets are, is a good way to prevent
problems.
"People
tend to be very secretive with their children, and secrecy
is not golden in this matter," Kotzer says. "Shock
alone can create a fight. Ask: Do you really want your sister
cut out of the will? They're the ones who will have to live
with the hatred, so consult them first."
One
feature of a will that is full of potential for family battles
is the disposition of personal items. You don't have to be
rich to leave fights among your children. Kotzer says he has
seen impassioned fights over china cabinets.
"Often,
the fighting is not over money, it is over memories,"
he says. "Don't assume goodwill. Don't assume that if
you stamp an equal sign on your will that you can walk away
and leave everything in peace. The kids can still fight."
Be
as specific as possible. Leaving "all my antiques"
to a particular person invites a battle over what is an antique
in terms of the will, and what is not. Or, if you leave your
piano to your son in Vancouver, who is going to pay to transport
it?
Review
the will regularly and make sure things have not changed in
value, knocking everything off balance.
"If
a parent with a hockey card collection valued at $5,000 in
1990 leaves that to his son, and $5,000 to his daughter, and
dies in 2001, he hasn't kept in mind that the Wayne Gretzky
card alone was worth $20,000 by then," says Kotzer.
He
suggests that you can attach a separate memo to your will,
either binding or informal one, setting out specifically which
personal items you wish to leave to which individuals.
Second
marriages are often problem areas with inheritances. If you
want your children to inherit something, you should leave
it to them rather than assuming that a spouse will pass it
along to them.
When
a family home is part of the estate and one of the children
lives there, you have to consider how to deal with that in
trying to be fair to each child.
"There
are no easy answers," Kotzer says. "There are strategies
and suggestions, and it may help to look at other people's
experiences. "But don't rush to judgment. Think about
what you're doing."
Information about the book is available at http://www.familyfight.com
or at 905-881-1500
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