Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m curious did his kids come to his funeral?
This is OP. No. One sent flowers.
NP. That's cold. Hard to muster any sympathy for them being disinherited.
+1Anonymous wrote:I would ignore their calls/emails. If they indicate they are pursuing legal action probably worth it to contact a lawyer of your own and find out what this process usually look like, but I wouldn't assume they will go down that road (it seems to me that it is likely to be expensive and ineffective for them.) I"m sorry, it sounds like a messy situation that really has nothing to do with you. I disagree with the the "come to an equitable agreement on your own" advice and pay them off. These were HIS wishes with HIS money. If his first family was horrible to him and he didn't want to leave them anything that is entirely his right and it would seem disrespectful, after death, to use his money for something he clearly decided not to do.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m curious did his kids come to his funeral?
This is OP. No. One sent flowers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I hope you can see your way to being a charitable and humane person. The rightful path is clear here, and only you can facilitate it.
It’s not OP’s money to be generous with. If I were OP I would 100% tell them to get lost.
I would not want to be a weapon in a dead man’s continuing war on his kids.
Then that’s the burden OP’s children will have to grapple with. It’s not OP’s money.
Anonymous wrote:I'd love to hear the legal grounds pps think this will can be contested?
Note, legal grounds does not include the hurt feelings of adult children:
The will failed to comply with the statutory requirements for it to be valid, often an issue where wills are handwritten (in whole or in part), unsigned, not witnessed or not notarized
Breach of fiduciary duty, for example where a power of attorney does something in their self-interest instead of in the interest of the person they are supposed to be serving
Duress (threat of violence, abuse, or other unethical, coercive action)
Fraud that affected the details of the will
Forgery
Misrepresentation
Someone used undue influence to ensure that the terms of the will benefited them
The person who made the will can be proven to have been mentally ill, incapacitated, or otherwise lacked the capacity to make a will
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I hope you can see your way to being a charitable and humane person. The rightful path is clear here, and only you can facilitate it.
It’s not OP’s money to be generous with. If I were OP I would 100% tell them to get lost.
I would not want to be a weapon in a dead man’s continuing war on his kids.
Anonymous wrote:OP, what does your husband think about the situation?
Anonymous wrote:I’m curious did his kids come to his funeral?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, what does your husband think about the situation?
What does the husband have to do with this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you should talk to a lawyer. It's perfectly legal to disinherit your adult children, but that doesn't mean it won't be contested. I would not respond to them.
I agree with this. Don't do anything without consulting a trusts and estates lawyer, who can advise on the implications of any action.
Anonymous wrote:OP, what does your husband think about the situation?