Featured
Article
You
Need to Plan Even if You Don't Have an Estate
Story by Jacqueline Skay, Attorney at Law
As printed in South
Coast Magazine
Last
Sunday night/Monday morning at 1:30am, I received
a call from my brother who lives in L.A. He was in
tears. My sister-in-law had made dinner Friday night
and a little later in the evening started feeling
seriously ill. They rushed her to the hospital. She
was kept for observation overnight. On Saturday they
ran tests. About 8:00pm Sunday they took her in for
exploratory abdominal surgery. A little after midnight
they came out and told my brother she would not make
it through the night. She made it through the night
so they upped her chance of survival to ten percent.
It's now TEN days later. She has not regained consciousness
and her condition is still critical.
My
brother has raised her daughter since the girl was
four years old. She's now almost fifteen. My brother
tells me the older two daughters are now saying they
want to come into the house and take things they think
their mother would want them to have. There are disagreements
about who should get what and they are beginning to
disagree about who should raise the younger girl.
My brother is deeply hurt that they have the audacity
and even the energy to focus on anything other than
their mother's recovery right now. The door for this
hurt and dissention was wide open because my own brother
and sister-in-law have done absolutely no estate planning.
They are both in their early sixties-certainly too
young to be thinking about dying. My sister-in-law
never put her wishes in writing even regarding the
simplest things like who she would want to finish
raising the youngest girl.
Contrast
this with a wonderful man and his nineteen year old
daughter who came into my office that very same Monday.
This man lost his wife about five years ago and now
he is told he has about a month to live. He is hopeful
that will be wrong but, he has two children, the nineteen
year old daughter and a fifteen year old son, who
may very well soon be without any parents. Because
he is still completely competent, he gets to make
his own decisions about his children's future. We
have now completed a trust and other documents and
arrangements for the continuation of the college education
of the nineteen year old and the guardianship and
trust administration of the minor until he reaches
age twenty five.
Because
of the relatively new privacy laws (HIPAA), everyone
should have a new advance health care directive, which
should be effective immediately. This allows you to
name an agent to speak to doctors on your behalf if
you become incapacitated and to obtain your medical
records if necessary to effectuate powers in a durable
power of attorney and/or trust.
Anyone
who has minor children should have, at the very least,
a will nominating a first and second choice for guardian
of the person (who will raise the child(ren)) and
a first and second choice for guardian of the estate
(who will handle the money until each child reaches
an appropriate age). The appropriate age is dependent
on the size of the estate and the maturity and intellect
of each child.
The
specifics of the planning will vary with every individual
and family. That is not my point here. My point is
simply, if you've done your estate planning be certain
you keep it current. And, spread the word. I never
asked my big brother about his personal business-and
now I can't tell you how sorry I am that I didn't.
Story
by
Jacqueline M. Skay, Attorney at Law
701 Palomar Airport Road
Carlsbad, CA 92008
220
South Broadway
Escondido, CA 92025
(760) 745-7576
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