Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TOD/POD, Trust. Leave nothing in an Estate.
When my father passed we had to pay his debts before dispersing the $$ from his trusts. Can you imagine how great seniors would have it if no one ever had to pay in the end. Just ring up massve cc debt. I guess no one would ever issue a senior a card in that case,
Poorly written trust
Um...no it wasn't. Revocable trusts do not provide creditor protection to the person that created the trust. See D.C Code Sec. 19-1305.05 and all the other states with similar provisions, I just know DC code section off the top of my head. A trust can provide creditor protection for successor beneficiaries of trust.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TOD/POD, Trust. Leave nothing in an Estate.
When my father passed we had to pay his debts before dispersing the $$ from his trusts. Can you imagine how great seniors would have it if no one ever had to pay in the end. Just ring up massve cc debt. I guess no one would ever issue a senior a card in that case,
Poorly written trust
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:TOD/POD, Trust. Leave nothing in an Estate.
When my father passed we had to pay his debts before dispersing the $$ from his trusts. Can you imagine how great seniors would have it if no one ever had to pay in the end. Just ring up massve cc debt. I guess no one would ever issue a senior a card in that case,
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the answer but when my married parent passed the cc debt went away.
Were there no assets?
There were. A trust and things not in the trust.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the answer but when my married parent passed the cc debt went away.
Were there no assets?
Anonymous wrote:His estate will be. So, if he has anything to pass along to her, she’d have to use that to pay the debt. However, if she calls the credit card company after he dies and says it’s a small estate, they might just write it off if her name isn’t in the account.
Anonymous wrote:TOD/POD, Trust. Leave nothing in an Estate.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know the answer but when my married parent passed the cc debt went away.
Anonymous wrote:If she’s not on the account probably not. But the estate will be.