Second Marriages - Estate Planning
Concerns
by Phil Craig
from ezinearticles.com
One of the biggest areas of dispute in estate planning is
with second marriages. Here is a question I received. I’ve
changed the facts around so that I am not giving specific
legal advice.
Phil,
My dad, age 87, is getting married soon so that his new wife
will be eligible for social security benefits on his earnings.
In his living trust he had made arrangements for me, my sister,
and his lady friend. What changes for us, his kids, when he
marries this lady? What do we need to know?
Wow, what a predicament.
My first reaction is to ask if his father was entering into
a marital agreement (a pre-nuptial agreement, or pre-nup)
before the marriage. What a pre-nuptial agreement will allow
is for his father to maintain control over the use and disposition
of his estate.
Without a pre-nuptial agreement, the laws of their state
concerning marital property will control.
What this means is that if his father dies after he re-marries
and fails to modify his estate plan, his new wife may receive
statutory claims or benefits from the father’s estate
(each state is different, so it is critical to receive local
advice).
Another area of concern is what happens if the father re-marries
and then the wife becomes incompetent? By getting married,
the father has opened up his net worth to the medical claims
and needs of his new wife.
When I was in active practice and was consulted by a widowed
client who wanted to re-marry, I reviewed the rules concerning
long term health (nursing home rules and costs) with him.
I showed him what he would be responsible for if they were
to re-marry. I’d say 8 out of 10 people I saw and went
over this with decided not to re-marry after learning the
rules. They decided to “live in sin.”
Another area of dispute I often saw was when the re-marrying
parent wanted to change his or her estate plan to provide
for the new spouse. This caused a lot of hard feelings. The
children often felt that they were entitled to the estate
of the first parent to die and that it should not be held
for the new spouse.
By providing for the new spouse, the re-marrying parent is
putting his children in a position where they are waiting
for their “step-parent” to die before receiving
what they felt is rightfully theirs.
So, think twice before re-marrying in your later years. Consult
with competent legal counsel and consider, at a minimum using
a pre-nuptial agreement. Consider the impact the new marriage
will have on your revocable living trust and whether any changes
are needed to your estate plan for Medicaid or estate tax
reasons.
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