âEverybody wants to go to heaven, but nobody wants to die.â
~ Unknown
âAt least twice here at my home away from home someone has raised the prospect of the imminent death of someone close to the them and their concerns about what would follow. Â Since this is what I do for a living, Iâm an attorney with a practice limited to probate and trust litigation, I thought a primer on what occurs after death may be helpful.
âIâm licensed in California and havenât practiced in any other state. Â I have had plenty of contact with attorneys in other states. Â What I discuss will occasionally have a different name in other states, but the substantive law seems to be pretty similar from one state to the next. Â Needless to say, if you are actually dealing with a problem then speak with a local attorney.
When You Know Death Is Imminent
âA terminal cancer diagnosis, hospice placement, or dementia diagnosis (barring divine intervention) is a signal the end is coming. Â Depending on the condition, it may come fast or slow. Â If your parent is still mentally competent and has the wherewithal, putting an estate plan in place or reviewing the existing plan is a good idea. Â If thatâs not the case, then now is not the time to prod Mom or Dad to put an estate plan in place or change the plan they have. Â Every state has laws of intestate succession if there is no plan. Â Thatâs gibberish for âsince you didnât put a plan in place, the government has one for you.â Â I know Iâm supposed to hate government, and generally I do, but having the government impose a plan when the soon to be departed didnât is far better than letting the family club each other bloody over the estate.
âWhat you should do right now is find the estate plan, if there is one, and pertinent financial records. Â All of this assumes Mom or Dad want some help and are willing to cooperate. Â If they donât then leave it alone. Â Interposing yourself when itâs unwanted is an excellent way to cause a lot of stress during an already stressful time. Â Want to cause a permanent rift with your parent or siblings? Keep trying to âhelpâ when your help has been declined. Â People aware of their impending end can be prickly. Â Unless you think someone is trying to financially benefit themselves at your loved oneâs expense, leave it alone if youâve been told to stay out of it.
âIf Mom or Dad will share the estate plan then read the trust, will, and durable powers of attorney to find out who is in charge in the event of mental incapacity and upon death. Â If itâs you, then congratulations! You have an absolutely thankless road ahead. Â A local probate judge has a sardonic joke. Â âYou know whatâs the second worst job in the world? Â Serving as trustee. Â You know whatâs the worst? Â Serving as co-trustee.â Â Sheâs right. Â Having two people in charge usually makes things worse.
If you are in charge then you will be amazed how everyone else in the family is suddenly an expert in medicine and finance while you are a bumbling oaf who doesnât devote enough time, effort, or energy to the task at hand. Â My jaundiced view is based on the cases that come into my office. Â They represent the minority of families. Â There are in fact families that help and support each other. Â Letâs hope that describes yours. Â And itâs worth noting, if you donât want the job or canât handle it then decline it. Â You arenât doing anyone any favors by taking a job you canât or wonât do. Â Thatâs another lesson from the rightfully aggrieved siblings I have represented over the years.
âIf you are in charge in the event of death or incapacity, then scan a copy of the estate plan. Â You will likely need more than one copy to provide to various entities as you go along. Â You can be sure the hospital will lose the durable power of attorney for health care you gave them three times before and the bank will have misplaced the trust or certification of trust just before they give you the new account agreement to sign. Â If you arenât in charge, then while Mom or Dad are alive itâs very unlikely you have a right to see the documents. Â Curious to know what you will inherit? Â Wait. Â When death comes all will be revealed. Â Until then itâs Mom or Dadâs money and is going to be used for them. Â At least itâs supposed to be but thatâs a separate discussion.
âWhether you are serving as trustee or attorney in fact/agent under a durable power of attorney, keep track of every penny you spend. Â Yes, I am being literal. Â Keep every bill, receipt, invoice, bank statement, cancelled check, etc. Â Expect to have to account for it later. Â
When Death Comes
Stephen Franklin: It’s all so brief, isn’t it? Typical human lifespan is almost a hundred years, but it’s barely a second compared to what’s out there. It wouldn’t be so bad if life didn’t take so long to figure out. Seems you just start to get it right and thenâŠit’s over.
Ivanova: Doesn’t matter. If we lived 200 years we’d still be human, we’d still make the same mistakes.
Franklin: You’re a pessimist.
Ivanova: I’m Russian, doctor. We understand these things.
âSoul Hunterâ Babylon 5
Dr. Steven Franklin and Lt. Commander Susan Ivanova
âWhether you are in charge (i.e. trustee, executor, or administrator) or not. Â Grieve. Â The day after your parent has died is not the time to call the attorney. Â Depending on your family dynamics, religious beliefs (or lack thereof), family geography, and financial ability you will have to put some time into the disposition of your loved oneâs remains and gathering family to do so. Â You may have rituals around grieving. Â Observe them if this is important to you.
If you donât, then take a tip from (((this))) lawyer. Â Take some time to grieve. Â I donât care who you are or what your relationship was. You have feelings you need to address or process. Â Was it a warm, close, loving relationship? Â Then you probably have stories to tell and to hear. Â There are tears to be shed and people to embrace. Â Unless a foreclosure sale for the family home has been set, then the financial stuff will wait. Was the relationship distant and cold? Â Your grieving is going to be different. Â Grieving may not even be the right word. You still have some feelings to address. Â Do it. Â
Getting Down To Business
âMoney, money changes everything
I said money, money changes everything
We think we know what we’re doing
We don’t know a thingâ
Tom Gray
âMoney Changes Everythingâ
âAll that stuff youâve seen in movies from the 1930s is garbage. (Iâm looking at you Ted S.)  The lawyer who drafted the will does not schedule a meeting with the entire family, there is no wood paneled room with a bunch of leather high back chairs, and there is no reading of the will.  Depending on where you live, there is a good chance the will is irrelevant.  Trusts have become the most common estate planning document in lots of places.  The higher the cost of probate the more likely a trust was used to avoid the cost.  A hat tip to Texas for making the costs and burdens of probate de minimus.  If you are in Texas and there is a will your probate will move quickly.  There are still good reasons to use a trust in there but I digress.
âIf the trustee, executor, or administrator, does his/her/xer job correctly then you will get a copy of the operative document in the mail. In the Golden State (*cough* bullshit *cough*) a trustee is required to mail out notice to the beneficiaries within sixty days of being informed of the settlorâs death. Â That notice identifies the trustee, provides their contact information, and tells the beneficiaries they have a right to request a copy of the trust. Â Most of the time a copy of the trust is mailed out with the notice making life easier for everyone involved. Â If itâs not, then make a written request to the trustee and/or the trusteeâs attorney. Â This doesnât mean sending a text or an email. Â Send a letter and keep a copy. Â Itâs exhibit one to your petition to the probate court if the trustee doesnât send you a copy of the trust.
âIf a will is the operative document, then the will must be deposited with the probate court for the county in which the decedent resided before their death and a petition for probate should be filed within 30 days if there is a need to open probate. Â Attached to the probate petition is a copy of the will (if there is one) and it gets served by mail on all the beneficiaries. Â Why do I keep saying executor or administrator? Â Are the overlords paying me by the word? Â By ZARDOZ, no. Â The person in charge of the estate when there is a will is the executor. Â The person in charge when there is no will is the administrator. Same position, same duties, same process, different name. Â I blame the British.
âWhether you are dealing with a trust or a will, if it was written in the last few decades,then you shouldnât find a lot of legalese in it unless it involves some significant tax planning or it was written by a kook (i.e. shitty attorney, paralegal with an inflated ego, or *shudder* a legal document preparer). If the document seems disjointed, contradictory, or otherwise incomprehensible for no good reason then I would check to see if Legal Zoom or Suze Ormanâs horrible estate planning software is involved.
âItâs usually easy enough to read the document to see who is nominated to serve as trustee or executor and how the estate will be distributed. Â If you really canât tell, then get to an attorney. Â There may be a genuine problem that needs to be addressed sooner rather than later.
âThe large majority of the time the document itself is fine and anyone who can fog a mirror understands how this comes out in the end. What isnât so obvious to anyone who isnât in charge is what has to be done in order to get to distributing the estate.
âRegardless of the document, creditors must be addressed.  But you know Mom and Dad paid all their bills when they came in and had very simple finances.  Great.  Then things will go quicker if there is a trust.  Oh, by the way, Mom and Dad may not have been entirely forthcoming with you.  Credit cards are a form of debt even if they didnât want to acknowledge it.  They paid their bill every month⊠or so you thought.  They paid the minimum and kept enjoying life as long as they were able.  That final hospital stay that Medicare pays for⊠it didnât pay the whole thing.  Expect bills from the ambulance, hospital, and a slew of doctors to come in over the next few months. Surprisingly, mortgage holders donât really care about the death.  They expect to be paid.  If they arenât then they will go through the state specific foreclosure process. Â
âWhat can the creditors get? Â It depends on whether the debt is secured or unsecured. Â If it is secured then the house, car, or boat is going back to the lender if the debt is unpaid. Â Assuming there is equity to be preserved but a cash shortage, then if anyone can pay until the asset is sold they should. Â The estate will repay them after it sells the asset and has cash on hand.
If the debt is unsecured then it depends on how title to the estate property was held at the time of death and what notice was given to creditors. Â If title was held by the trustee to the trust or solely in your parentâs name, then the trust or probate estate can be liable for the debts. Â If an account at a financial institution was held in joint tenancy, pay on death, or has a designated beneficiary, then it is going to that person. Â It doesnât belong to the trust and it isnât going through probate. Â A creditor can try to chase it but unless there is a lot of money at stake they wonât.
âCalifornia has a very severe creditors claim process. Â In probate, the executor or administrator is responsible for sending a creditor claims notice to all known or suspected creditors. Â The creditor has sixty days in which to file their claim. Â Miss it by a day and they are out. Â No exceptions. Â The creditor gets nothing. Â There is an optional procedure trustees can use for the same purpose with the same effect.
âIf the creditor does file a claim then the trustee, executor, or administrator has to accept it, reject it, or partly accept it and partly reject it. If the claim is rejected in whole or in part then the creditor can file a civil lawsuit against the estate for the amount they claim is owed. Â If they donât file within 90 days of getting the rejection of their claim, then they are barred from collecting.
âAt this point, all the property has been gathered and creditors have been paid. Â There is some net amount left in the estate. Â Presumably, there are still attorneyâs fees to be paid (thank you state government) and the trustee, executor, or administrator also needs to be paid from the remaining estate. Â There are two ways to get to distribution. Â First, everyone who inherits can waive an account. Â Second, an account can be provided and is usually subject to court approval.
âWhether to waive an account entirely depends on your level of trust and the transparency thatâs been shown during the process. Â I commonly advise clients who have at least a half way decent relationship to send out copies of all the underlying financial records to the beneficiaries and ask them to waive an account. Â If they do waive then it speeds things up and saves everyone some money. Â If they wonât waive then the expense and delay is on them.
âIf there is going to be an account, then it only makes sense to petition the court for approval. Â Itâs the only guaranteed way to cut off liability once it is approved.
âWith that done, the check is in the mail. Â When you get it, you may also be asked to sign a receipt. Â Attorneys who play it straight send out receipts that say exactly what you would expect. Â Please sign here to acknowledge receiving these items of tangible property and a check for $X. Â If thatâs what you got, then sign the receipt. Â
âThatâs it. Â Youâre done. Â Hopefully, everyone got along and the family relationships are no worse for wear. Â
I really appreciate Sloopyâs music links that somehow relate to the daily links. Iâll do my part to follow suit. This is more or less how I think about death.