Learn the Ins and Outs of Being an Executor or Trustee
Learn the Ins and Outs of Being an Executor or Trustee
Taking on the job of executor or trustee is not a role to be taken lightly. If you ignore certain problem signs, you could be setting yourself up for aggravation, red tape, years of work, angry battles with family members and even lawsuits, according to an article on the MSN Money Web site.
“I think people would be shocked to know what’s often involved”, is often stated by many elder law attorneys.
“Often the most difficult part is not dealing with the money or the lawyers or the courts; It’s the personal property. People have been known to fight over Tonka toys.”
An executor is a person designated in a will to see that the deceased’s last wishes are carried out and to settle the deceased’s probate estate. An executor’s job typically lasts from a few months to two years. If you’re asked to be the trustee of an ongoing trust, by contrast, your job could go on for decades. A trustee is in charge of investing the money in the trust, making distributions and filing tax returns. Attorneys say the trustee’s job is often harder and has the potential for more conflict.
“If you’re held to have mismanaged the trust, then you’re held personally responsible, you’re required to make the trust whole out of your own pocket.” Executors can be sued as well.
All this doesn’t mean you should necessarily say no when asked to be an executor or trustee. Very few wills or trusts are contested in court — fewer than 3 percent — and a competent elder law attorney can help guide you.
But the article identifies a number of red flags that should prompt you to think twice before saying yes:
You can’t obtain a copy of the will or trust to read beforehand. Browning recommends that you also sit down with the lawyer who drafted the document to discuss your duties and the situation you’re likely to face.
Someone’s being disinherited
There is already family tension
The person who’s asking you isn’t well organized
The trust was created with a kit or software rather than by a lawyer
You’re being put in charge of a sibling’s money.
Source: MSN Money article, 6/08.