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Wall
Street Journal
Advice
on the Small Stuff
By Kelly Greene
Staff Reporter
A
recent column about inheritance planning prompted readers
to share some of their own experiences in doling out the "small
stuff."
When
a family member dies, any strain in the process of dividing
up the estate usually surrounds household objects with more
sentimental value than monetary worth. But many parents don't
anticipate those kinds of problems when they make their wills;
thus, they don't leave specific instructions about who gets
what, often putting brothers and sisters in an awkward spot
at best, or causing a permanent rift between siblings at worst.
Jacquelyn
Cotter, who lives in Sacramento, Calif., notes that her family
found a good strategy for dividing things fairly. For starters,
gifts given by an heir to the person who died went back to
the heir. So, for example, her brother got back the string
of pearls that he had bought their mother in Japan while he
served there in the Navy. Next, the family had an appraiser
value every item in the home.
"When
that was done, the heirs gathered on a weekend, and we went
through the house item by item," Ms. Cotter writes. "If
two or more people wanted the same item, a coin was flipped
until there was a final winner." Anything that went unclaimed
was sold. "In the end, every person's items were added
for an individual final value number, and since naturally
some people had taken more than others, the dollar amount
was evened up in the final distribution of cash" after
the estate was settled.
"That
way everyone felt that they were treated fairly, although
they may have regretted losing a coin toss or two," she
notes. "And best of all, there were no hard feelings!"
Joseph
Tether, a reader in Myrtle Beach, S.C., says he and his wife,
who have seven children from two marriages and 13 grandchildren,
realized "the probability of serious conflicts"
two years ago when they sold their larger home to move into
a smaller one. It was "open warfare over chairs, tables,
paintings, etc.," Mr. Tether writes. "We looked
upon it as a preview of what might happen when we have left
the planet."
They
started looking for solutions, and decided against making
a list of specifically who would get what. Using the "yellow
pie plate" metaphor from our earlier column for treasured
keepsakes, he notes, "'Yellow pie plates' break or are
lost or are sold or are repainted some other color."
Instead, the Tethers set up an auction process. Their executor
would have their possessions appraised, then their direct
descendents would be entitled to bid on any object beginning
at its appraisal value, with winning bids deducted from that
person's share of the estate.
A
couple of their children consider the method "cold and
insensitive," he says, "but our lawyer liked the
concept and thinks it will work. Too bad we won't be around
to find out."
Whatever
strategy you choose, Toronto estate-planning attorney Les
Kotzer advises talking to your children about it.
"Too
many parents think that when they die, it's going to be like
Christmas morning, and everyone's going to open the presents
and be surprised," he says. "You don't want to shock.
You don't want to surprise. Your wishes should be known already."
That
way, if you unwittingly have made assumptions that could damage
relations among your children -- such as that your children
won't mind that everyone gets the same inheritance even though
you paid $50,000 for one child's medical-school bills -- they
can raise those issues with you now. Mr. Kotzer, co-author
of a book called "The Family Fight: Planning to Avoid
It," offers more examples at his Web site (familyfight.com).
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