• Welcome to the LegalBeagles Consumer and Legal Forum.
    Please Register to get the most out of the forum. Registration is free and only needs a username and email address.
    REGISTER
    Please do not post your full name, reference numbers or any identifiable details on the forum.

Late partners will, in laws from hell and the non beneficiary executor that is me

Collapse
Loading...
X
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Late partners will, in laws from hell and the non beneficiary executor that is me

    Hi all, hope this is the right place for my question. In 2011 my partner passed away aged 45 of a misdiagnosed and aggressive cancer. He had written his will in 2007 the same year he bought a property. He bought it as both an investment and a place for his parents to live as they had told him they kept having to move because of bad landlords. His will was very straightforward, the parents could live there until they died or decided to move (something called a living interest i think). Ownership of the property was to be passed equally to our two daughters now aged 20 and 15. I am the executor but not a beneficiary. Our daughters cannot do anything with the house until it is empty and they have both reached the age of 25. About six months before he died there was an incident with a blocked upstairs toilet that resulted in it overflowing into the kitchen below with significant damage to the ceiling and electrics. A claim was put in to the insurance which resulted in an £11,000 payout in the weeks before he died, his parents are fully aware of this.

    The day after he died his mum came round with a copy of the will she found at the property pointing various things out to me but was insistent that the insurance money was not to be included as part of his estate, that it should be withdrawn from his account and given to her to spend on the house repairs and to have a conservatory built on the back like her son had apparently always wanted her to have. My solicitor was of the opinion that me taking the funds from his account after his death, for anything other than funeral costs was not a good idea and probably illegal. I explained this to her and shortly after received a letter from a solicitor she had visited implying I was being underhanded with this money in some way and with preventing her spending it on the repairs (and the conservatory). It was explained to me that money in a persons account at the time of their death becomes part of their estate regardless of how it got there. His parents actively objected to me using the solicitors i had gone to as they said because a friend of mine worked there who my partner didnt get on with there was a conflict of interest and eventually i gave in and used the solicitors they had visited and whom had helped my partner write his will.

    Due to numerous issues with the solicitors of their choice, this seemingly clear cut will is still not settled, the bill is going to be double what it would have cost had we stayed with my solicitor and mother in law is on the warpath again, she says the solicitors have spent the insurance money illegally on costs and also on paying off some unsecured debts my partner had outstanding, that she is going to tell the insurance company who will sue them to recover it. I could go on and on, she is currently pretending to like me again whilst this is going on, but my daughters have informed me her and her husband are bad mouthing me to anyone who will listen, including them, so i assume at some point they are going to again point the finger at me for something.

    So my questions are...
    1. The £11,000 insurance payout, because she keeps going on about it insisting its not and never should have been included as part of the estate but should have been given to her to make repairs (and get a conservatory).....is she right? Is it legal or not to remove that sum of money from a deceased persons account just after their death because it came from an insurance claim. If I had done as they asked (and i never would have) could i technically have been stealing from the estate on their behalf. I want to put her straight once and for all if thats the case.

    2. Can an insurance company do what she says, ie..insist the money is recovered from the estate and used for repairs and do they do this?

    3. If she was to get hold of that money instead of it paying off his unsecured debts and solicitors costs, could anyone he owed money to pursue any unpaid money from my daughters as his beneficiaries?

    I have always said that any money left after everythings paid should go to my partners property for repairs. When the insurance initially paid out it was agreed by both him and his parents that the 11,000 far exceeded the amount needed to get the work done. His mother was heard on numerous occasions by many different people pestering my partner about a conservatory while he was ill, taking up leaflets to the hospice to show him trying to get him to sign blank cheques and is telling anyone who will listen that this was what he had always wanted for her. To be clear (and im sorry if i sound petty) what he told numerous people was that he wasnt wasting money on a conservatory so his parents could fill the house with even more animals and it could be a new dog toilet. He loved his mum but he hated the way they lived, the house stinks, the animals have caused lots of damage and they keep getting more pets. I dread to think what state the house my daughters will inherit is going to be in. My eldest went to dog sit recently, she was supposed to stay over night but couldnt as the smell was making her physically sick.

    I'm trying to play nice out of respect for my late partner but im reaching the end of the line with it all. I'm in a new relationship now and shes taken to asking anyone and everyone including my daughters how long its been going on and trying to dig up dirt on the new person in my life, the woman is relentless, the sooner the will is sorted the sooner i can cut ties with her, ive had 22 years of her not having anything nice to say about anyone and i just want her gone now. Sorry if i sound ruthless.

    Thanks in advance if anyone can help xx
    Tags: None

  • #2
    Re: Late partners will, in laws from hell and the non beneficiary executor that is me

    Hello Flamingmo and welcome to Legal Beagles

    I can see why you're flaming!

    The insurance money would have been to do the insured repairs - the projected conservatory is a red herring and anyway you wouldn't be able to build one with the leftover money if the repairs were done properly (IMVHO).


    So my questions are...
    1. The £11,000 insurance payout, because she keeps going on about it insisting its not and never should have been included as part of the estate but should have been given to her to make repairs (and get a conservatory).....is she right? Not as regards the conservatory she isn't. Is it legal or not to remove that sum of money from a deceased persons account just after their death because it came from an insurance claim. If I had done as they asked (and i never would have) could i technically have been stealing from the estate on their behalf. I want to put her straight once and for all if thats the case. Of course it's part of the Estate if it hasn't yet been used for the purpose intended.

    2. Can an insurance company do what she says, ie..insist the money is recovered from the estate and used for repairs and do they do this? I think that unlikely in the extreme but stand to be corrected. Mind you, as the money was provided as a claim to conduct repairs, I am intrigued to know why it hasn't been used for this purpose (the repairs must have been quite urgent).

    3. If she was to get hold of that money instead of it paying off his unsecured debts and solicitors costs, could anyone he owed money to pursue any unpaid money from my daughters as his beneficiaries? Debts are not passed onto others after death unless jointly incurred but you as executor would have the duty to deal with the debts of the deceased fairly before distributing any inheritance.


    I am so sorry for your loss and also so very sad, for you, that the death of a loved one has stimulated such unpleasant consequences.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Late partners will, in laws from hell and the non beneficiary executor that is me

      Thank you so much for your quick reply. When the toilet accident occurred, the insurance company sent out a specialist cleaning company to sterilise everything and plumbers to repair and prevent it happening again. They put the money into my partners account, because of the speed at which his illness progressed (a matter of six weeks from diagnosis to death) we all focused on him, he himself was always talking about getting better and overseeing the work himself, I was with him most of the time so i couldnt oversee it and he didnt trust his parents with it because they wanted a bodge job so there would be enough for a conservatory, So it stayed in his bank until his death. There is no doubt there is work needs doing, which is why ive wondered wether i did the right thing by leaving the money for the professionals to deal with after he died. To be honest it was such a straight forward will, he didnt have much, one house, one bank account, two kids, i thought this would have been over ages ago and it all would have been done.

      Regarding his debts, the solicitors have told me i have to repay his 2 unsecured loans with the banks out of the estate, if the debt dies with him (so to speak) can i instruct solicitors not to pay those loans, which would then free up the money for the in laws to shut them up? Whichever way it goes I feel like someone is not going to get paid and its because of a decision i make

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Late partners will, in laws from hell and the non beneficiary executor that is me

        The debts are paid before the rest of the estate is distiubted a solicitor would do this

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Late partners will, in laws from hell and the non beneficiary executor that is me

          Originally posted by flamingmo View Post
          Thank you so much for your quick reply. When the toilet accident occurred, the insurance company sent out a specialist cleaning company to sterilise everything and plumbers to repair and prevent it happening again. They put the money into my partners account, because of the speed at which his illness progressed (a matter of six weeks from diagnosis to death) we all focused on him, he himself was always talking about getting better and overseeing the work himself, I was with him most of the time so i couldnt oversee it and he didnt trust his parents with it because they wanted a bodge job so there would be enough for a conservatory, So it stayed in his bank until his death. There is no doubt there is work needs doing, which is why ive wondered wether i did the right thing by leaving the money for the professionals to deal with after he died. To be honest it was such a straight forward will, he didnt have much, one house, one bank account, two kids, i thought this would have been over ages ago and it all would have been done.

          Regarding his debts, the solicitors have told me i have to repay his 2 unsecured loans with the banks out of the estate, if the debt dies with him (so to speak) can i instruct solicitors not to pay those loans, which would then free up the money for the in laws to shut them up? Whichever way it goes I feel like someone is not going to get paid and its because of a decision i make
          The solicitors are likely to be correct = not a good idea to keep a dog and bark yourself.

          The debt would only "die with him" should he have died insolvent.

          I repeat how very sorry I am that you have this added burden.

          Let the solicitors bear the brunt and refer your M-i-L to them.

          Comment

          View our Terms and Conditions

          LegalBeagles Group uses cookies to enhance your browsing experience and to create a secure and effective website. By using this website, you are consenting to such use.To find out more and learn how to manage cookies please read our Cookie and Privacy Policy.

          If you would like to opt in, or out, of receiving news and marketing from LegalBeagles Group Ltd you can amend your settings at any time here.


          If you would like to cancel your registration please Contact Us. We will delete your user details on request, however, any previously posted user content will remain on the site with your username removed and 'Guest' inserted.
          Working...
          X