Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have your own friggin beach house. Dammit. Count your blessings, let dad give her the beach house. Why are you so jealous???
Because she has saved and made sacrifices to own the beach house, whereas the sister hasn’t.
Anonymous wrote:I feel for you, OP. It's always the ones who are doing less who are angling for more. After my MIL died my SIL whined about not having some of her mom's jewelry when she visited my FIL. He let her take pieces home. My second SIL found out about it and came and took the rest fearing she'd lose out. Around 25-30k gone. We only found out about it because FIL felt guilty and told DH who was furious. He called both of them and ripped them. We would have never thought to ask for anything while he was alive. This sister has no right to be involved so deeply in decisions that involve a house that isn't hers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have your own friggin beach house. Dammit. Count your blessings, let dad give her the beach house. Why are you so jealous???
Because she has saved and made sacrifices to own the beach house, whereas the sister hasn’t.
Yeah but how often is OP visiting her dad and helping him out? Maybe the sister is helping care for him or spends time with him and that provides companionship and comfort to him?
The sister doesn't even hold a job!
So what? She still is showing up for the father. How ofter in OP visiting?
If a $1m house wasn't at stake, would she be there?
Would OP care if her dad didn’t own a mortgage free property? I wonder if the other sibling also cares or this is just an OP issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op, understand your concern. I have a younger sister who always, always had her hand out in one way or another and played the sympathy card with my parents throughout their lives. Their estate was always set up to benefit the grandchildren, and my siblings and I were fine with that, just not my younger sister. Fast forward to my parents passing within weeks of each other, she had at some point gotten them to revise their will and kept it secret from the rest of the family. I consider it to be elder abuse the games she played, but so be it, she got everything down to the china. For a small moment in time she invited us to come and take some remembrance of our parents, but even that gesture went away very fast. She was not a squatter, but an opportunist and assumed that because she was the youngest she was and always was entitled to special exception. Needless to say, she has lost most of the family who refuse to have anything to do with her and I am treading in that direction, not because I need the money but I can't seem to let it go in my own mind how deceptive she was with all of us, especially my elderly parents. They deserved better than that in their final years. My hope is they did not see it the way everyone else does.
that is so damn sad. happened to a good friend of mine. the brother/son was the youngest. he inherited the multi-generational family business. he drove it into bankruptcy after taking out a few loans from the older siblings. he then went to their mother, who was still alive. got her to change the will and leave everything to him, down to every last bit of jewelry, even pieces she had discussed with her daughters. the sisters are beyond angry and have had nothing to do with him for 7 years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have your own friggin beach house. Dammit. Count your blessings, let dad give her the beach house. Why are you so jealous???
Because she has saved and made sacrifices to own the beach house, whereas the sister hasn’t.
Yeah but how often is OP visiting her dad and helping him out? Maybe the sister is helping care for him or spends time with him and that provides companionship and comfort to him?
The sister doesn't even hold a job!
So what? She still is showing up for the father. How ofter in OP visiting?
If a $1m house wasn't at stake, would she be there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have your own friggin beach house. Dammit. Count your blessings, let dad give her the beach house. Why are you so jealous???
Because she has saved and made sacrifices to own the beach house, whereas the sister hasn’t.
Yeah but how often is OP visiting her dad and helping him out? Maybe the sister is helping care for him or spends time with him and that provides companionship and comfort to him?
The sister doesn't even hold a job!
So what? She still is showing up for the father. How ofter in OP visiting?
If a $1m house wasn't at stake, would she be there?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have your own friggin beach house. Dammit. Count your blessings, let dad give her the beach house. Why are you so jealous???
Because she has saved and made sacrifices to own the beach house, whereas the sister hasn’t.
Yeah but how often is OP visiting her dad and helping him out? Maybe the sister is helping care for him or spends time with him and that provides companionship and comfort to him?
The sister doesn't even hold a job!
So what? She still is showing up for the father. How ofter in OP visiting?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op has a right to be concerned. I've often seen the favorite child get the vacation house to keep it in the family. Also parents also think an unsuccessful child should be given more money. I'd assume this is what her dad is planning. But is all of that worth losing a sibling over? Life isn't fair.
Op should be more concerned over her dad remarrying and a step mom really getting 100% and then only leaving it to her kids. Then op would really have something to complain about. Happened on both sides of my family.
LOL That actually happened to me. We had a family condo on the ocean for many years. After the divorce he dated and ended up remarrying. Though us kids were suppose to have the condo she has it which is fine. We are all doing well and get along with her but our dad should have kept it separate imo. They also had a nice home, but that happens quite a bit. Don't depend on someone else's assets.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It does seem your sister is acting as if she will inherit the property and when your dad passes, she may seek to claim that she owns it outright although it is quite difficult to adversely possess property.
https://myersfletcher.com/resources/item/it-s-risky-business-neglecting-an-estate.html
You may want to just ensure nothing shady is going on/conduct some diligence (check the deed on the property and make sure it is titled in your dad's name or that it is titled in his trusts's name and email a PDF of the trust or will and your dad's estate plans to all of your siblings - to ensure that everyone has a copy and it is clear your dad or his trust owns the property and that the estate plan is to distribute it equally among his three children).
Adverse possession exists as a concept solely to provide law school professors with exam questions
This. I don't remember a lot about it, but I do know that attempting to adversely possess the house when OP's father is living there is . . . unlikely to be successful.