Follow
Share

My mom and dad were well prepared and established a trust for their finances. My Dad died in March; my sisters and I were with my Mom earlier as she had a massive stroke. She died without pain and with us at the bedside.

We are now calling people and setting up the funeral. Just wondered about next steps: do we need to have an attorney if there is a trust and no contest to the will? An accountant? Anyone else been through this who can advise as to whether or not we need a professional for this? And if so, which kind?

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Find Care & Housing
You need a lawyer, contact the one who wrote the Will or established the Trust, because if you do this incorrectly, there can be fiscal penalties. If the estate is fairly simple, one hour with an attorney will be money well spent.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

If the trust was done correctly, there is no need for a will. Trusts are private unlike a will, so having it "contested" would be hard to do. The trust should have had all the assets owned by trust so assets pass outside of probate according to trust document. Contact the attorney who did the document as there will be filings that have to be done to change ownership of assets or distribution and really they can do this much easier & correctly than your attempting.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Even though your parents had a trust, there may be pour over wills as well to deal with any assets that are not able to be in the trust. You need to contact the attorney who drew up the trust as well as your parents' accountant or financial advisor to find out if they also had assets outside the trust.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Please find a good estate lawyer. Your parents already had a will (each) correct?
The estate lawyer will help you, combine the wills and the trust and make distributions to all beneficiaries. His fee is well worth the trouble. Don't hesitate.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Having a trust that is FUNDED can really save a lot of legal expenses and hassle upon the death of the grantor (person who created the trust). However, as others have mentioned, there are often at least some assets that were not titled in the name of the trust at the time of the grantor's death.
Even if everything was indeed titled in the name of the trust, the complex legal language of a trust can be difficult for a layperson to understand, so having an attorney who specializes in wills and trusts (estate planning) read through the document and explain to you what needs to be done will most likely be necessary for all but the very simplest of trusts.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

I've worked with two law firms specializing in trusts and eldercare. In both cases I was told to call them IMMEDIATELY when there was a death of either of my parents. When my father passed we then went to the law offices after the funeral and new trust documents were prepared moving things from the "Mom and Dad Smith" trust, to the "Mom Smith" trust. Did you have things changed when your first parent passed?

Now that both parents have passed, the Trust needs to do its work and move assets to those designated in the Trust. The law firm that prepared the trust will know what to do and how to do it correctly. You need to contact them so that the remaining Trust assets are moved to you and your siblings correctly, all taxes are paid, and the Trust is closed. It will cost to used the law firm, and that is money well spent.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Who is the Trustee? Is it same as Executor? I wouldn't get all excited about disbursing the Trust, until if and when their home (s) or other real estate, vehicles, and business properties are sold (if they are to be sold). Also are there any outstanding bills? You must not divide the Trust accounts, until notice of death & any creditors have been paid. I'm not a lawyer, but you need to make sure those bills are paid. Yes the trust is a separate entity from your parents, but (here I'm fuzzy on details) the trust needs to pay any outstanding bills incurred by parents, unless some lawyer can correct my lack of details here.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Be aware. I hired 3. Elder care attys on a pretty big estate over a million they all messed up and bold faced lied to us. Dont take anyones word if they yell u something go home sbd check it there is a wealth of info on the internet. They also like ti take ur case and let it sit there and charge u 400 an hour.I dont know what state u live in but u usually have 9 months to wrap it up.good luck to u. thanks
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Thank you Mr Helser ~ you've identified a very sore spot that my Mom [widowed] has with her trust. The trust, per se, is not funded ... is there a source or reference to find out how bank accounts, stocks, etc should be Titled? She insists keeping them with her and me as "jt owners with rights of survivorship" [with me] - and there are 2 other siblings. The trust itself is not funded [i presume this is where the titling of the assets come in {?} , but does specify percentages. Does titling of the stocks and bank accounts need correcting to put everythng into the Trust? Thank you. [She won't change titling, thinking the government will take her money away from her]. We've spent $5,000 meeting with her attorney and he just complicates things more. Thank you - forgive me please if i am speaking off topic.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

crickett33, you bring up questions that probably apply to many on this forum. Please post your question in a new topic so that everyone who is in the same "boat" will be able to access the responses. Thanks, TorieJ
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

We have not needed an attorney to settle the estate. We only had her home and her personal belongings and money, there was no property or businesses or stocks etc to worry about. If your parents had these things you may need an attorney.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Chemkrd - most of these comments lend great advice to your queries actually... And pamstegma is correct, it really is advisable to have an experienced estate attorney on board, probably the one who draws up the trust for you - someone you have a nice rapport or relationship with, believe it or not that's important... you don't want to experience what 1GoodGirl went through! And the comment from TorieJ indicating that a good lawyer is money well spent is right -- but the money to hire that law firm or attorney has to be available in order to spend it. I don't know what your cash flow looks like, however a lot of people don't have a great deal of cash in the bank, or from relatives or friends... so you have to get that money from somewhere. Banks are a hassle and their paperwork is extremely invasive and time consuming, and your credit has to be superlative these days to get approved for any amount. Also, banks or credit unions won't let you borrow against the inheritance you're expecting... but a niche trust fund loan, inheritance advance or estate advance firm most likely will advance you a good sized inheritance advance or estate advance, giving you the cash flow you'll need to hire and maintain a estate or trust attorney, from the retainer on forward. It's certainly worth a shot... you'll need some fairly serious cash flow to keep a good trust fund attorney going. Not millions... but you know what I mean. Certainly thousands. Plus, applying for a secure trust fund inheritance advance, possibly a popular 72-hour inheritance loan, is a very fast and easy process, and there are no monthly payments or compounding interest to worry about. An estate advance, or trust fund loan, requires just one payoff, with simple terms. And you don't need to deal with credit scores or credit reports to get an inheritance advance. Also, inheritance loans never require employment checking, income history, or any of that invasive stuff. It just might be the way to go for you. The right type of inheritance advance solution, to get your hands on the sort of immediate funds you'll need to enlist legal counsel you can depend on.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

In my experience, with my FIL, once he passed, my husband was executor. He took over, got copies of the death certificate (a LOT as I recall, everybody needed one) and began the seemingly endless task of sorting things out. I believe he made one phone call to the atty who drew up the trust. He didn't even charge us, just told Hubs what to do. Hubby was already on the checking acct, he simply "liquidated" everything. First, paid all the bills, then began selling, giving away physical assests. There was some drama, as of course you'd expect, but all in all, in this case, it went fine. Took more than a year to get it all done, but I think that's normal. Not a huge estate--under $500,000, so maybe that helped.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I meant to say that as dad died with a will in place, there is no need for probate.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Midkid58, a Will does not eliminate the need for probate. Even a small estate of less than 30K has to have a fiduiciary filed at county court.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter