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Question About Inheritance.
It appears as though in the event of my mother's passing (99 yrs. old presently) our family trust could have my share be in the area of $250k plus.
. My question: If my g/f and I (I'm 73 and she is 63) were to get married and I then pass away prior to my mother, would she (g/f) be in line to receive my inheritance? Is there a time frame involved or would she automatically be qualified to receive? . Aside from paying an attorney, any advice as to where I might look for info on the matter? . TIA. SmileWavy |
No, not unless your mother included her in her will (or the terms of the trust). Doesn't matter whether you're married or not.
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But, it's dependent upon how it's actually written in the will. I think it can be written in such a way that it could also pass to your wife (if you had one). I hope that helps. |
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Never thought of that. Thanks. |
How it's written is apparently the key. Hmmm......
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My mother's is written the same way. If I died before she does my share would go to my remaining (living) siblings. My wife would get nothing. The only way to change that would be for my mothers trust / will to be modified to include "significant others". Martial status on my end, or my siblings, some of which are single but in long term relationships is irrelevant. That said, if your (or my) mothers will / trust is modified to include spouses or "others" it would depend on how your (or my) will / trust is written; i.e. to include or exclude spouse (in the form of a prenup if you're in a community property state) or in your case G.F.
My mother is 94, so, like you it's not far off. This form of will seems to be common in that generation. There's an odd sort of rivalry that breeds out of it between siblings. It also, IMHO, creates a weird macabre dynamic with everyone "waiting for her/him to die"... My stepfather was really secretive about it. Even my mother didn't know the size of his estate until he died. Hope this helps. |
Don - Cheers to you mother living a long life. That's good news for you.......I'm executor of my mothers estate right now; dividing between four siblings and myself......Advice above is spot on...Even if you marry your girlfriend, what you inherit after the marriage is "separate property".....Keep it all in an account with just your name and then name a beneficiary for that account.
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Ha ha ha. My Mom's friend had serveral copies of her will. Each will had different kids either included or written out. She just made whichever will active depending on how her kids were treating her. She even had one that said it was all going to the state because none of her @#!! kids were getting a dime.
My Mom put everything jointly in my name 10 yrs before she passed. Her will stated such because I was taking care of her. And if any of my siblings wanted anything they had given to her they would have to get it from me and it was up to me to let them have it or not. She did that because none of them as much as lifted a finger to help take care of her. I even bought a MIL plan house to make it easier and put in both our names so if I passed first she would get the house free and clear paid for by my insurance and not have to mess with inheritance taxes. |
@Richard, sounds like an old Michael J. Fox and Kirk Douglas movie... Hehe.
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My siblings turned into vultures and a sister and SIL tired get me away from the house and take what they wanted and throw everything else away.
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A bit of trivia for ya'll....Guess who controls Jim Morrison's estate...
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Ex-wife or something like that.
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https://www.blog.trialandheirs.com/celebrities/celebrity-legacies-jim-morrisons-leads-estate-battle As to the OP's post as what was mentioned.....how her will is written :) |
State law will decide, not necessarily how the will is written. The question of what interest your girlfriend who becomes your wife before/after the inheritance comes in depends on when you're married, what's in the will, how long you're married, whether you comingle the assets, you have a prenup, and a thousand hints I can't think of off the top of my head. There no way I know how to tell without talking to a lawyer in your state who specializes in trusts and estates.
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Both my sisters went 'nuts' after my father died, wasted a decent percentage of his estate on accountants and lawyers. Much cheaper to pay a lawyer to prepare/modify a few documents than defend a lawsuit later. |
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As for Jim Morrison, whoever is managing his estate sure isn't maintaining his grave in Paris. It's a mess. |
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http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1502067228.JPG |
This has nothing to do with marital property rights. Those only come into play if Don inherits then divorces. Wife may or may not have property tights in money HE inherited.
The question posed was whether his wife inherits his share if he predeceases his Mom. The answer to that question is "only if the will/trust so provides". A spouse has no rights in a legacy that has not passed to a spouse prior to the spouses death or their divorce. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
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