Anonymous wrote:She's not dying, she's getting a divorce. Why don't you focus on that instead of pestering her about the will, get her through her crisis, and then sit down with her to write out it out.
OP. Make sure your aunt clearly understands that if she doesn’t get a proper divorce her ex husband would be legally entitled to a big chunk of her estateAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t worry about the will. Worry about the marital estate and dividing it up in a written settlement agreement. That agreement will confirm that each party waives all estate rights in the event the other party dies. Doing the will first won’t help. Maryland has the elective share statute. That means that he could elect to take what is in her will or a set portion of her estate. If she left him zero, the elective share statute means he doesn’t get zero...since he’d elect to take the percentage he’s entitled to as the surviving spouse. A written settlement agreement eliminates this.
- a divorce lawyer
*why a lawyer is a good idea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:New poster here. I think OP is concerned that if the aunt dies, a third of her property will go to her husband, and since they have been separated for decades, there is likely someone else she'd like the property to go to. I assume OP is just trying to keep anything from going to the husband. Being husband on paper is good enough for him to inherit.
maybe her aunt wants it that way. it's really not op to worry about or decide.
This is the case in MD. My aunt doesn’t want her husband to inherit. He has not helped her financially since they separated thirty some years ago although they then had minor children. Two of their kids still rely on her financially due to learning disabilities and mental illness. She wants to protect them, but is being penny wise and pound foolish about the lawyer.
Anonymous wrote:Average life expectancy is still less than 80 years. How do you figure 70s isn’t elderly? Even people who live to 100 are in the final third of their lives by their 70s. 65 and up is elderly, though an individual in that age range may not act or look elderly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don’t worry about the will. Worry about the marital estate and dividing it up in a written settlement agreement. That agreement will confirm that each party waives all estate rights in the event the other party dies. Doing the will first won’t help. Maryland has the elective share statute. That means that he could elect to take what is in her will or a set portion of her estate. If she left him zero, the elective share statute means he doesn’t get zero...since he’d elect to take the percentage he’s entitled to as the surviving spouse. A written settlement agreement eliminates this.
- a divorce lawyer
So should the aunt leave him $1 in her will? Or does he get to know what’s in her will before making the election? (I’m kinda hoping it’s more like Let’s Make a Deal and he doesn’t get to know.)
With special needs in the mix, your aunt should have a simple will in place. Can anyone advise OP whether/how the terms of the pre- and post-divorce wills could vary to achieve the suits goals?
Anonymous wrote:Don’t worry about the will. Worry about the marital estate and dividing it up in a written settlement agreement. That agreement will confirm that each party waives all estate rights in the event the other party dies. Doing the will first won’t help. Maryland has the elective share statute. That means that he could elect to take what is in her will or a set portion of her estate. If she left him zero, the elective share statute means he doesn’t get zero...since he’d elect to take the percentage he’s entitled to as the surviving spouse. A written settlement agreement eliminates this.
- a divorce lawyer
Anonymous wrote:Don’t worry about the will. Worry about the marital estate and dividing it up in a written settlement agreement. That agreement will confirm that each party waives all estate rights in the event the other party dies. Doing the will first won’t help. Maryland has the elective share statute. That means that he could elect to take what is in her will or a set portion of her estate. If she left him zero, the elective share statute means he doesn’t get zero...since he’d elect to take the percentage he’s entitled to as the surviving spouse. A written settlement agreement eliminates this.
- a divorce lawyer