The
Associated Press
Inheritance Fights Can Destroy Families
Eileen
Alt Powell
AP Business Writer
NEW
YORK - It was soon after their mother's death in 1996 that
Lea Yardum and her sister got into a big fight and stopped
speaking to each other.
Yardum
and her sister both decided they wanted the cherry wood
nightstand from their mother's house, a piece that originally
belonged to their grandmother.
"There
were much bigger things we could have been arguing about,"
said Yardum, 31, of Sherman Oaks, Calif. "But we were
both caught up in the emotionalism after my mother died,
and that caused things to happen that I would never have
dreamed of."
Many
families have stories of fights that ensued after a loved
one's death, pitting brother against brother over the summer
cottage or sister against sister over an antique ring.
Experts
say families that communicate — before death, whether
verbally or in writing — can avoid such family-wrenching
spats.
"It
really helps if the parents talk to the kids and ask questions
like, 'Do we have anything you really want?'" said
attorney Denis Clifford, author of the book "Estate
Planning Basics." "Then they can write in their
will or in a living trust, this thing goes to so-and-so."
A
will is the legal document used to pass property on to beneficiaries
or to appoint a guardian for minor children. Living trusts
are documents used to transfer property through a trust
to beneficiaries outside of probate.
Clifford
also said that if parents haven't brought up inheritance
issues, the children should.
"A
lot of this is easier to sort out before someone passes
away," he said. "Get the communication going —
parents to kids, kids to kids, kids back to the parents."
For
Yardum and her sister, 44-year-old Gena Wilder, the impasse
over grandmother's table ended several weeks later, after
Wilder's teenage son cleaned the table with a strong household
disinfectant and destroyed the finish.
"Gena
called me," Yardum remembers. "She was laughing
and told me what he had done. Soon we were both laughing,
then crying."
And
talking again.
"The
lesson learned for us was, indeed, family comes first —
just like my mother always said," said Yardum, who
operates a public relations firm with her sister.
Les
Kotzer, a lawyer who specializes in wills and estates, said
many people believe disputes only happen in rich families.
But he said he's seen them in families at all income levels.
"People
don't just fight over money, they fight over memories,"
he said. "People think, 'I'm not a millionaire so why
should I worry?' Then their heirs end up fighting over a
watch."
Kotzer,
who with law partner Barry Fish wrote "The Family Fight
— Planning to Avoid It," said even seemingly
small things can create hard feelings.
He
told the story of a woman who was upset when her brother
inherited their mother's ring and her sister-in-law had
the stone put in a new setting.
"That
ring was on my mother's hand for 40 years, and now she's
gone and changed it," Kotzer quoted her as saying.
"She said, 'I hate my brother and his wife. I won't
forgive them.'"
Dividing
up an estate also can rekindle long-simmering sibling rivalries,
Kotzer added.
He
recalled a woman who felt consistently shortchanged by her
family and who brought a knapsack to his office, asking
him to give it to her brothers. Inside were the shredded
remains of the boys' childhood toys, family photos and letters
the boys had sent home from camp.
"Frankly,
what they were fighting over wasn't even major in the estate,"
Kotzer said. "But a lot of anger came out."
His
book is aimed at giving families — both parents and
children — tools to work things out amicably through
good record keeping, gifts to children and charity, wills
and power of attorney documents.
"I
try to tell parents in the book, never assume goodwill among
your children," Kotzer said. "After death, things
happen.