Anonymous wrote:"Fancy china"--donate to a thrift store.
Anonymous wrote:"Fancy china"--donate to a thrift store.
Anonymous wrote:Op, the Executor has legal duties. They have to submit an Inventory as part of the estate paperwork to the court. They have stuff to do. Don't be overly critical that nothing has been done. It's a steep learning curve. If they wanted to be entirely legal, they would lock everyone out including you, take inventory, before proceeding with next step: dividing things fairly.
You sound like a reasonable person who would act reasonably ... but just go and take what you want ... because the timeline is not what you like, is horrible advice to most.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a junk service come several times, and I took a lot to thrift stores.
The silver is not worth much. I’m not sure what the collectibles are, but they are probably also not worth much. From the family house, I took a special chair. I saw it sold on eBay for $800, but I’m probably going to donate it to the thrift store one day. I can’t be bothered with eBay, etc.
We split items up from parental home, but I find I’m donating most of them. I don’t have space, and I am even decluttering more items inherited many years ago from grandparents.
My siblings are hoarders, so they pay for storage for old items they’ll never use. I don’t want to be like that.
Not to hijack but how much get you get for a silver set (cutlery)? And where to sell that sort of thing? We "inherited" some from my DH's grandparents and have not used it once in 25 years. We're not attached to it and would like to get rid of it. Not expecting a lot but what is reasonable?????
Ditto for the "fancy china."
Anonymous wrote:We had a junk service come several times, and I took a lot to thrift stores.
The silver is not worth much. I’m not sure what the collectibles are, but they are probably also not worth much. From the family house, I took a special chair. I saw it sold on eBay for $800, but I’m probably going to donate it to the thrift store one day. I can’t be bothered with eBay, etc.
We split items up from parental home, but I find I’m donating most of them. I don’t have space, and I am even decluttering more items inherited many years ago from grandparents.
My siblings are hoarders, so they pay for storage for old items they’ll never use. I don’t want to be like that.
Anonymous wrote:OP you *cannot* just go into the house and take stuff, even if you believe nobody wants it. There is a process and you have to handle it.
For the supposed valuables, there’s probably little of actual value, and it’s the executor’s duty to take care of that. Let that one go.
For donations, that is also up to executor. Let it go.
For items you want, all you can do is make a list and send it to the executor and other siblings and *request* to take them. Put them all aside in the house in one place.
The most I think you can reasonably do to impact the process is suggest that everyone get a fair turn to come take the items they want. But that’s just a suggestion that the executor may or may not take.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP you *cannot* just go into the house and take stuff, even if you believe nobody wants it. There is a process and you have to handle it.
For the supposed valuables, there’s probably little of actual value, and it’s the executor’s duty to take care of that. Let that one go.
For donations, that is also up to executor. Let it go.
For items you want, all you can do is make a list and send it to the executor and other siblings and *request* to take them. Put them all aside in the house in one place.
The most I think you can reasonably do to impact the process is suggest that everyone get a fair turn to come take the items they want. But that’s just a suggestion that the executor may or may not take.
But make sure that if the executor sells the items of value, that they report the amount and split it among the beneficiaries. While there might not be items that are wildly valuable, amounts can add up. We had a lot of items that were worth under a hundred each than a number worth maybe a thousand. We were surprised at how things add up and you end up with say, an extra $5000 per beneficiary. I realize that for some people here $5000 isn’t a lot, but for me and my siblings, it was a very welcome extra.
That’s more reason for the executor not to bother with selling items. More work to sell and more paperwork to track costs and sales pricing. In some cases, you have to deal with crazy and suspicious and hoarding inheritors. No, thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP you *cannot* just go into the house and take stuff, even if you believe nobody wants it. There is a process and you have to handle it.
For the supposed valuables, there’s probably little of actual value, and it’s the executor’s duty to take care of that. Let that one go.
For donations, that is also up to executor. Let it go.
For items you want, all you can do is make a list and send it to the executor and other siblings and *request* to take them. Put them all aside in the house in one place.
The most I think you can reasonably do to impact the process is suggest that everyone get a fair turn to come take the items they want. But that’s just a suggestion that the executor may or may not take.
But make sure that if the executor sells the items of value, that they report the amount and split it among the beneficiaries. While there might not be items that are wildly valuable, amounts can add up. We had a lot of items that were worth under a hundred each than a number worth maybe a thousand. We were surprised at how things add up and you end up with say, an extra $5000 per beneficiary. I realize that for some people here $5000 isn’t a lot, but for me and my siblings, it was a very welcome extra.
Anonymous wrote:OP you *cannot* just go into the house and take stuff, even if you believe nobody wants it. There is a process and you have to handle it.
For the supposed valuables, there’s probably little of actual value, and it’s the executor’s duty to take care of that. Let that one go.
For donations, that is also up to executor. Let it go.
For items you want, all you can do is make a list and send it to the executor and other siblings and *request* to take them. Put them all aside in the house in one place.
The most I think you can reasonably do to impact the process is suggest that everyone get a fair turn to come take the items they want. But that’s just a suggestion that the executor may or may not take.