Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Why parents don’t share details about assets

- By Ilyce Glink and Samuel J. Tamkin Ilyce Glink is the CEO of Best Money Moves and Samuel J. Tamkin is a real estate attorney. Contact them through the website ThinkGlink.com.

As baby boomers and their parents age, we’re receiving more questions about how to manage their housing and their inheritanc­es. We’ll continue to publish these questions, comments and our responses, and encourage you to keep sending them our way.

Reader comment: Maybe there was more informatio­n from your correspond­ent being blindsided by his sister setting up a trust without including him, but your answer indicates you assume the mom has good reason to do so. Here’s a quick synopsis of my story:

Ten years ago, I learned my brother had exploited my parents out of hundreds of thousands of dollars. When I confronted him about this — asking questions about his reasons — he began a yearslong campaign to convince my mother that I was mean to him and aggravatin­g a health condition of his. His wife, who I barely know, joined forces with him, which really convinced my mother I was no good.

Neither of us live near our mother, but over these years, I have been the one to always go when she needed extra help for medical issues, including many surgeries and emergencie­s. I do every holiday with her. He generally sees her three times a year — on New Year’s Eve, on her birthday and for a vacation at the lake where she used to rent a cabin.

I tried to get my mother to go to joint therapy and have repeatedly suggested mediation to iron out things, but have instead watched a slow erosion of my place in the family.

I started out as the executor of her estate with powers of attorney for financial matters and health care, and my brother was alternate. Now there has been a series of four or five wills that eroded this. Apparently, my brother and his wife have taken over all these powers and appear to be creating a trust that is secret from me. If my mother were to pass away today, it appears that

each of my children would get one-sixth of her estate and my brother and his wife (they have no children) would get two-thirds with nothing for me. I have only learned this by occasional­ly snooping.

I’ve talked to an adult protective services worker who said they see this sort of exploitati­on frequently, but that it is very hard to prove anything and put in place protection­s for an older person. I am talking to an attorney now who specialize­s in these cases, and said it is typical for one child to be able to manipulate the parent and turn her and/or him against the sibling.

Unfortunat­ely, my father, who would never have gone along with this, passed away before I learned that my brother has essentiall­y taken my mother’s money. It is very hard to prove undue influence, and clear incompeten­ce is also not necessaril­y a factor easy to demonstrat­e.

Rather than assuming the leftout child deserves it, it might be nice to encourage parents to be open with their children about their plans and be willing to listen to all children’s concerns. Our family will never again be whole — and it was so unnecessar­y.

Thanks for considerin­g another viewpoint.

Ilyce and Sam respond:

Although you never know what’s going on until you hear both sides, this sounds like a pretty bad deal for you and, potentiall­y, your mother. Still, there are lessons to be learned on all sides.

First, we agree with your suggestion that parents should discuss their finances, their current financial affairs and any arrangemen­ts they’ve made to dispose of their furniture, furnishing­s, assets or other possession­s upon their death. We also agree that there are times when one child may have a greater influence on a parent than

another and that favored children might take advantage of their standing in a family.

Still, exploiting the fact that you’re the favorite child in a family isn’t necessaril­y illegal. Unless there is something illegal going on, it’s quite hard to go to the authoritie­s and try to get financial arrangemen­ts reversed or changed.

It’s important to get your financial house in order, and by that we mean not only drafting a will and powers of attorney for health care and financial matters. You also should talk with your children about how much money you have and what you intend to do with it when you die.

Even so, that won’t change that our parents are human. At the end of the day, you hope that your parents will treat their spouse and children fairly, if not equally. As you’ve found out, that’s not always the case.

We’ve found that many people don’t have financial conversati­ons with their children. When their children are young, they don’t talk about money because the kids are too young and inexperien­ced. But as they and their children age, the excuses shift: Parents worry children might fail to launch if they know they have an inheritanc­e; or their children have a significan­t medical issue that will require lifelong financial support; or they want inheritanc­e to go to their children and not their spouses; or they play favorites.

At the end of the day, we believe parents often don’t share informatio­n about their money because they’re insecure about what their children will do with that informatio­n. As you’ve experience­d, it isn’t always sunshine and rainbows, and it can truly be hard for those left out.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? It’s important to get your financial house in order and that includes having key legal documents in place.
DREAMSTIME It’s important to get your financial house in order and that includes having key legal documents in place.

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