The
Toronto Star
Legal
Advice Can Avoid Family Feuds
Estate planning promotes peace
James
Daw
Toronto Star
Barb's
mother died in May, but a younger brother who had earlier
taken charge of affairs has refused to discuss or disclose
their mother's will.
That
has left Barb (not her real name) and the rest of her brothers
not knowing what they stand to inherit or — what is
more troubling — whether the secretive brother owes
money to the estate.
Barb
knows she owes part of what she agreed to pay for her mother's
home before she became ill, but only has hearsay evidence
about her brother.
She
recalls what her mother said when another brother asked
her: "What happened to the money from (selling) the
house?"
"Well,"
said the mother, "I guess (my son, the executor) has
it. You will have to fight him for it after I am gone."
"Oh,
gee," exclaimed Thornhill lawyer Barry Fish of Fish
& Associates Professional Corp. "This is the absolute
worst attitude a parent can have."
The
mother seems to have committed several sins in the religion
of estate planning for family peace that Fish and his associate
Les Kotzer preach to clients, and readers of their 2002
book The Family Fight, Planning to Avoid It.
The
mother did not express her intentions to all of her children
when she granted loans or other favours to some of her children,
and she did not discuss the contents of her will.
She
documented the loan to her daughter, but the siblings do
not know whether she received a promissory note from their
brother. If she did, they have no way of knowing whether
the note has been ripped up. In any case, the sole executor
will be under a cloud of suspicion until he opens up to
his family.
"Our
book is about avoiding that very type of issue," Fish
said yesterday. "There is a whole section we write
on: Don't assume goodwill among your children, (because
if you do) this is the very type of thing that is going
to come out."
One
of Barb's brothers got approval of most of his siblings
to consult a lawyer. But the lawyer suggested, and Fish
and Kotzer would agree, they should hold off from taking
legal action.
Fish
said a lawyer could file a motion in court that would compel
the executor to produce the will by a set date. Nothing
would prevent the siblings from acting immediately.
But
Fish and Kotzer say that hiring a lawyer instead of trying
to work things out informally, and in private, could be
a costly waste of their modest inheritance. It's also a
sure way to blow a family apart, an outcome the deceased
parent would surely never have wanted.
"While
alive, a parent has that magic wand to put out a fire (of
jealousy and suspicion), but when the parent is not around,
there is no one to put out the fire and it just grows,"
said Fish.
Then
the responsibility falls on the heirs to think constructively,
and not to put money and self-interest ahead of family harmony,
for their own sake and that of their children.
Fish
and Kotzer tell a touching anecdote in their book about
a young woman whose wedding was spoiled by the absence of
a dear aunt. The aunt and the bride's father had been treated
equally in their mother's will, even though the aunt was
the only one who devoted years of her life to caring for
their mother. So she skipped the wedding.
Fish
said that he would recommend that Barb and her brothers
try to open lines of communication by explaining their concerns,
and present a compelling warning: "There is an easy
way and a hard way."
Meanwhile,
Barb and her husband have been wondering whether they should
continue to make payments on their loan. They worry the
brother could keep the money, when the loan should be offset
by Barb's inheritance. Yet if they were to stop payments
without consulting her brothers, they would risk becoming
the target of a new round of suspicion and resentment.
The
Family Fight provides a short, 137-page, guide to wills
and estate planning in simple terms and includes several
instructive anecdotes from Fish and Kotzer's law practice.
It's
the sort of book Fish wishes he himself could have handed
to his late father when he came to seek advice about a will.
"I
had a lot of trouble initiating anything where there was
an inheritance factor," he admits. "It was embarrassing.
This (book) breaks the ice in a way the parent can understand."
Kotzer,
the more promotional member of the partnership, has a standing
offer that he will review a person's will and power of attorney
documents free of charge to see whether they contain any
recipes for family war.
He
also offers Money Talk readers who order one of their self-published
books a free CD of two superbly performed and emotion-charged
songs — The Family Fight and Photos In A Draw —
that he wrote in honour of his late mother.
The
unlawyer-like songs have opened doors to numerous radio
and television call-in shows across Canada and the United
States in recent weeks, and prompted thousands of visits
to his promotional website http://www.familyfight.com.