Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kids should be your healthcare power of attorney, and you should set up a trust that benefits them only. Your house can go to your spouse. You owe your kids this.
This, but kids inherit the house. Leave spouse 10% of total estate or nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kids should be your healthcare power of attorney, and you should set up a trust that benefits them only. Your house can go to your spouse. You owe your kids this.
This, but kids inherit the house. Leave spouse 10% of total estate or nothing.
Then don't get married. You need to care for your spouse during death. Kids are being greedy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do NOT add that woman to the title of the house you want to leave to your children. What you want to leave her is called a life estate which is the right to reside at a house un disturbed for the duration of her lifetime. No matter what she is smiling and telling you to your face now, assume all that will change and she will not even acknowledge your children after your death. Plan accordingly
Both of these things happened to my Dad. The life estate, which was a good idea, and my stepmother’s lawyer quickly declined so we could sell it. And her lawyer declined it because she had stopped speaking to us merely months after he died for reasons that she never explained.
What did the lawyer decline? To follow the living trust rules ? Or declined creating the living trust
It sounds like the stepmother via her lawyer just declined to accept the life estate -- they chose not to live in the house.
PP here and that’s exactly the case. Dad and stepmother lived about two thirds of the time in a house that was hers and the other third in a summer house that was his. Each of their estate plans said that they would have a life estate for a year for the house that wasn’t theirs to give the surviving spouse time to make other plans. We asked if she needed the year for the summer house (during which she would pay for any expenses) and got back a no response from her attorney.
Anonymous wrote:I’m pp, and yes OP your kids should at least be co-healthcare directives. My dad’s wife wanted to pull his life support immediately (when he was placed over night) before my sibling and I arrived. I told the doctor that I had his notarized POLST that said moderate life support was acceptable and we’d gotten flights to be there and that I’d sue the hospital if they listened to his wife.
You don’t think it will be contentious, but it typically is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your kids should be your healthcare power of attorney, and you should set up a trust that benefits them only. Your house can go to your spouse. You owe your kids this.
This, but kids inherit the house. Leave spouse 10% of total estate or nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Do NOT add that woman to the title of the house you want to leave to your children. What you want to leave her is called a life estate which is the right to reside at a house un disturbed for the duration of her lifetime. No matter what she is smiling and telling you to your face now, assume all that will change and she will not even acknowledge your children after your death. Plan accordingly
Anonymous wrote:Your kids should be your healthcare power of attorney, and you should set up a trust that benefits them only. Your house can go to your spouse. You owe your kids this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do NOT add that woman to the title of the house you want to leave to your children. What you want to leave her is called a life estate which is the right to reside at a house un disturbed for the duration of her lifetime. No matter what she is smiling and telling you to your face now, assume all that will change and she will not even acknowledge your children after your death. Plan accordingly
Both of these things happened to my Dad. The life estate, which was a good idea, and my stepmother’s lawyer quickly declined so we could sell it. And her lawyer declined it because she had stopped speaking to us merely months after he died for reasons that she never explained.
What did the lawyer decline? To follow the living trust rules ? Or declined creating the living trust
It sounds like the stepmother via her lawyer just declined to accept the life estate -- they chose not to live in the house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do NOT add that woman to the title of the house you want to leave to your children. What you want to leave her is called a life estate which is the right to reside at a house un disturbed for the duration of her lifetime. No matter what she is smiling and telling you to your face now, assume all that will change and she will not even acknowledge your children after your death. Plan accordingly
OP said she contributes to the mortgage, so this will get messy.
OP is an idiot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do NOT add that woman to the title of the house you want to leave to your children. What you want to leave her is called a life estate which is the right to reside at a house un disturbed for the duration of her lifetime. No matter what she is smiling and telling you to your face now, assume all that will change and she will not even acknowledge your children after your death. Plan accordingly
Both of these things happened to my Dad. The life estate, which was a good idea, and my stepmother’s lawyer quickly declined so we could sell it. And her lawyer declined it because she had stopped speaking to us merely months after he died for reasons that she never explained.
What did the lawyer decline? To follow the living trust rules ? Or declined creating the living trust
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do NOT add that woman to the title of the house you want to leave to your children. What you want to leave her is called a life estate which is the right to reside at a house un disturbed for the duration of her lifetime. No matter what she is smiling and telling you to your face now, assume all that will change and she will not even acknowledge your children after your death. Plan accordingly
Both of these things happened to my Dad. The life estate, which was a good idea, and my stepmother’s lawyer quickly declined so we could sell it. And her lawyer declined it because she had stopped speaking to us merely months after he died for reasons that she never explained.