Anonymous wrote:OP here. It was money from house sales, no interest bearing securities or a well crafted portfolio, just money in a parked checking account as far as I can tell. I was told the Trust pays for any legal fees or accounting related to it, which is especially outrageous when there’s no money to even do this. I don’t have the resources to hire a lawyer to get blood from a stone. I just want to know if it really is common, in people’s experience, to have money in an SNT go so fast. Thank you everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So you said it was cash and real estate. Were there any dividend yielding stocks or mutual funds? The issue may have been how the trust was set up and getting poor advice. Real estate can be fussy if the rental has a lot of repair issues and isn't in a desirable area. Cash just sits there and gets used up fast. The ideal would have been a bunch of savy investments with dividends where he could have lived off the dividends each year and the principal would be there.
DP but I took OP to mean the account was funded with real estate sale proceeds, i.e. the parent's house sold and the money put into the trust.
The bottom line is this doesn't pass the sniff test and OP is right to be concerned. The sibling is in a vulnerable position.
Anonymous wrote:So you said it was cash and real estate. Were there any dividend yielding stocks or mutual funds? The issue may have been how the trust was set up and getting poor advice. Real estate can be fussy if the rental has a lot of repair issues and isn't in a desirable area. Cash just sits there and gets used up fast. The ideal would have been a bunch of savy investments with dividends where he could have lived off the dividends each year and the principal would be there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My BIL has a mental health handicap and lives in an apartment paid by Medicaid and SSDI. His expenses seem to be minimal; cigarettes, food in addition to food stamps, clothing, cable tv, internet, birthday gifts to family. His uncle is the trustee and now says the money is all gone. The Trust was funded with cash and real estate sold in 2011, balance was $400,000. In your experience, is it realistic the beneficiary required this much money over 12 years? Attempts for an accounting were denied and there’s no money to pay lawyers.
That's about $3,300 a month. So, yes. It's realistic.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The fact that they won’t give you access to the accounting is a huge red flag. I’d file a complaint and have it investigated based on that alone.
Complaint? As in lawsuit? Or…?
Anonymous wrote:The fact that they won’t give you access to the accounting is a huge red flag. I’d file a complaint and have it investigated based on that alone.
Anonymous wrote:My BIL has a mental health handicap and lives in an apartment paid by Medicaid and SSDI. His expenses seem to be minimal; cigarettes, food in addition to food stamps, clothing, cable tv, internet, birthday gifts to family. His uncle is the trustee and now says the money is all gone. The Trust was funded with cash and real estate sold in 2011, balance was $400,000. In your experience, is it realistic the beneficiary required this much money over 12 years? Attempts for an accounting were denied and there’s no money to pay lawyers.