The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Dying without a will is rough for surviving relatives

- Michelle Singletary The Color Of Money

WASHINGTON » Whenever I give a talk about estate planning, I ask the audience to guess the percentage of Americans who do not have a will.

Most people guess in the 90% range.

It’s a trick question.

Various studies show that most adults have not prepared a legal will. But the point I’m really trying to make is that everyone has a will in a way — just not one that they have executed.

If you die “intestate,” meaning you don’t have a legal will, state laws determine how your assets will be distribute­d to your heirs.

You hear all the time about wealthy celebritie­s dying without a will. The most recent was Aretha Franklin, who died last year.

Franklin had three handwritte­n wills, one left under a couch cushion. The artist’s failure to do proper estate planning has left a legacy of discord. Her children — four sons — are in a heated court battle. Things have gotten so bad that a judge put the estate’s administra­tion under court supervisio­n.

But if you think this just happens with the rich and famous, you need to talk to Rhonda Green.

Green knows all too well what happens when individual­s fail to plan for their death, and I’m not talking just about leaving instructio­ns on the distributi­on of assets. She’s been the eyewitness to fights over funeral arrangemen­ts.

Green is the funeral services manager at my place of worship, First Baptist Church of Glenarden in Maryland. It’s her fulltime job, and there’s no cost to the families she assists in planning the funerals of their loved ones.

Green can tell you some stories. Here’s just a glimpse of what’s she’s seen:

• A woman, with no will, died with four adult children. Two of them wanted to cremate their mother to save money. The other two wanted to honor their mother’s wishes for a burial. They ended up in court, where it was discovered that the mother had purchased a cemetery plot for herself. She received her burial, but the conflict left the children divided.

• An older man passed away, leaving a $125,000 life insurance policy to his much younger girlfriend of two years. His adult children had no idea she was the sole beneficiar­y. The girlfriend,

as was her right, refused to use any of the insurance proceeds to pay for the funeral or burial. The man’s children had to come up with the money themselves. When the girlfriend tried to attend the funeral, the police were called.

But here’s a tale that should send you straight to an attorney’s office to draw up a will of your own:

A man died and his current wife didn’t want his children or their mother (his ex-wife) to have anything to do with planning the funeral service. Well, it turned out that the husband had never taken his ex-wife’s name off the house, nor had he removed her as the beneficiar­y of his insurance policy. The ex got everything. To her credit, the former wife did pay for the funeral and burial, but she reclaimed the house that was rightfully hers. The widow had to go live with her mother.

After having to act as a mediator for warring family members, Green developed a guide to encourage people to plan for their death. This document turned into a book, “My Exit Plan: Getting My House in Order.” It’s the Color of Money Book Club pick for this month. You can order it at rhondagree­n.org or on Amazon.

This self-published book is impactful largely because of Green’s experience at the frontlines of family disputes and dysfunctio­ns. You can’t help but shake your head reading about a wife trying to snatch the microphone from her dead husband’s two stepdaught­ers during his funeral service. A forgotten

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States