Anonymous wrote:
I am sure MIL intends to be "more charitable" putting it too nicely - to SILs and not so to DH, even though he has done so much for the family and they basically would not be where they are without DH. She's just a sh*tty and arbitrary person. She is very old, otherwise it would never cross my mind. She squirrels it away, but I guarantee a lawsuit if she tries to shortchange DH. DH will gladly eat up any and all of what SIL gets if she is left more. He is seeing how rotten she is as time passes.
Anonymous wrote:The thing to watch is dementia with a second spouse preventing access of the children, and ultimately changing the will. It happens a LOT.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Evenly. My spouse (first and only) have an estate plan that includes trusts to protect our kids' inheritance in the event of death followed by remarriage. I'll be goddamned if some 2nd wife is going to spend her way through what I've worked for and leave my kids out in the cold.
Dividing things up unequally is almost never worth the drama it causes, unless you have one child who is severely disabled, and even then you have to be careful that you don't screw up any benefits they need by leaving them too much money. Even if one kid is well off and another isn't--fortunes do change. The well off kid could go through a layoff or become disabled, the not well-off kid could marry rich late in life. If one kid is getting a lot of gifts during life (for rehab or whatever), even it up while you are alive.
How will you make sure that a second wife will not get to the kids' money?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Evenly. My spouse (first and only) have an estate plan that includes trusts to protect our kids' inheritance in the event of death followed by remarriage. I'll be goddamned if some 2nd wife is going to spend her way through what I've worked for and leave my kids out in the cold.
Dividing things up unequally is almost never worth the drama it causes, unless you have one child who is severely disabled, and even then you have to be careful that you don't screw up any benefits they need by leaving them too much money. Even if one kid is well off and another isn't--fortunes do change. The well off kid could go through a layoff or become disabled, the not well-off kid could marry rich late in life. If one kid is getting a lot of gifts during life (for rehab or whatever), even it up while you are alive.
How will you make sure that a second wife will not get to the kids' money?
Good idea. My father's wife is spending any inheritance I would have received.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Evenly. My spouse (first and only) have an estate plan that includes trusts to protect our kids' inheritance in the event of death followed by remarriage. I'll be goddamned if some 2nd wife is going to spend her way through what I've worked for and leave my kids out in the cold.
Dividing things up unequally is almost never worth the drama it causes, unless you have one child who is severely disabled, and even then you have to be careful that you don't screw up any benefits they need by leaving them too much money. Even if one kid is well off and another isn't--fortunes do change. The well off kid could go through a layoff or become disabled, the not well-off kid could marry rich late in life. If one kid is getting a lot of gifts during life (for rehab or whatever), even it up while you are alive.
How will you make sure that a second wife will not get to the kids' money?
Anonymous wrote:Evenly. My spouse (first and only) have an estate plan that includes trusts to protect our kids' inheritance in the event of death followed by remarriage. I'll be goddamned if some 2nd wife is going to spend her way through what I've worked for and leave my kids out in the cold.
Dividing things up unequally is almost never worth the drama it causes, unless you have one child who is severely disabled, and even then you have to be careful that you don't screw up any benefits they need by leaving them too much money. Even if one kid is well off and another isn't--fortunes do change. The well off kid could go through a layoff or become disabled, the not well-off kid could marry rich late in life. If one kid is getting a lot of gifts during life (for rehab or whatever), even it up while you are alive.