I'm so glad this guy met his uncle before he passed, he obviously was a sweet kind hearted guy, and got to have a deep connection with his nephew. I think they're both lucky having known each other!
The uncle went to the trouble of writing not just a will, but a trust too. He obviously knew who he wanted to include and who he wanted to exclude. He was counting on the caller to follow his wishes.
^This. If someone goes the extra step to enact a trust, your exclusion wasn't an oversight, it was a choice. He wanted to make it clear he wanted you to have NOTHING.
Well, sometimes it doesn't, in my country, a will can be contested, and there are other laws that take precedence over a will, when my father died , his 2nd wife basically said she was going to take us to court to get ownership of the house my father left us and this is quite legal, there are provisions in the legal system for spouses, dependants to make a claim on the estate which overrule what is written in the will, so sometimes a will can be worthless unfortunately..... speaking from personal experience
Wills are useless. My dad had a second marriage. When he passed his second wife's kids moved their mom to a different state and changed their will. We were told wills vary from state to state. We lost my dad's money to her nasty kids who couldn't wait to get his money.
We added a statement in our wills that if anyone, for any reason, contests the will, they are immediately and forever exempt from any proceeds. This was suggested by our trust attorney.
Good news... Hopefully should keep your heirs in line. Bad News... Just another lawyer ploy to increase their chances of further litigation by adding another layer.
That’s actually really dumb because there are often legitimate reasons to contest the execution of a will. For example if the executor does something that goes against your intentions then it would be valid to challenge it. Or if there is an ambiguity in your will and it’s interpreted against your intentions then it would be valid to challenge. Why would you disinherit someone who challenges something that you would agree with if you were alive?
I'm so glad our little family all got along. When my grandmother died she had two surviving children, both married. She wasn't rich but she did have a pretty healthy bank account and some land. There were no issues, no drama.
It's only messy in terms of the attempted guilt. But it's very straightforward. You're the executor of the will and you have a moral obligation to carry out his wishes and not disrespect his memory by dishonoring his wishes. Everyone else can go to kick rocks. It's what he wanted with his money so that's what you're doing. It was his choice not yours
He is legally obligated to give the money to who it was designated to as the executor. But once they receive that money, they can choose to do with it whatever they want. So once he received his portion of the money as a person written into the will, he can now do what he wants with that portion. Of course he has no obligation to give any of it to them, but he is legally allowed to give his own portion of the inheritance to whoever he wants, and of course his family will know that. The executor just gets the money to the right person. They don't then tell those people how to spend it. And he got the money to himself. Now he can do what he wants with it.
@@kristencampbell5533 He said his uncle went to the trouble of creating a Trust. So it depends on how the trust is written, you can put stipulations/conditions on trust money. It's not always free and clear. So it kinda depends on what's in it.
As the estate executor,I'd tell them to take a hike. Besides,as the executor,legally you can't change anything in the will. Where's there's a will,there's a greedy relative.
As the executor, he has to give the money to the person it belongs to. Once that person receives the money, they can do whatever they want with it. Since HE is the one most of it belongs to, HE can do whatever he wants with his portion, which is what the relatives are going after. He has no legal obligation not to give his money to certain people - he can just choose not to.
Dave, you are right people aren't entitled to something if they are not in a will But the courts look at it differently. My Dad died and 7 years after his 4th wife died, her kids came after his estate when my Dad died. Even with the best attorneys, we were given few options by her kids. They wanted a payoff because he excluded them in his will even though their mother had died 7 years previously to my Dad. We went to court for a hearing and the first judge would not toss it out. He set up a trial date. My siblings and I were told if we go to trial his kids would liquidate the estate with continual appeals. Their basis was my Dad was abusive to their mother. Yet, they were married for 15 years and she never wanted out while they were alive. Revisionists made-up history about a dead person to make a quick buck.
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I am dealing with a situation like this right now. My family is jealous that my aunt left her house to me. My siblings are upset about it and keep making snide remarks. My aunt hasn't even passed yet.
Don't let them alienate her to changing her wishes. I liked what someone said. If they contest the will they will get nothing. Let aunt know she may put something similar in her will
I feel for you. My husband and I get all my mothers possessions and finances. My sister insists it be split 3 ways with us daughters. I don't want to lose my sister...we'll see.
Contacting absent family members, regardless of the reason for their absence, is a 50/50 gamble. It could end up being the best life decision you have ever made, or the worst.
Where is it messy ? Your uncle legally appointed you and your wife . Your uncle told you his thoughts and opinions on others . You and your wife have been entrusted to carry out his wishes .
Not anymore the Will and Trust are both made out of easy to forge paper and need a State Probate or NICER Prebate to stop the quit claim financial elder abusing title deed thieves.
My Mom and her Cousin was left a small fortune by their Grammy - The Cousin was determined to fight for all of "Grammy"s money & land, and hired an attorney - - Evidently there was no executor, or none appointed . . The lawyers "stole" every penny of the inheritence, and the Cousin was okay with that - she just didn't want my Mom to have anything. . . True colors shine brightest in the bank . .
@@kimberlydickson9266once in a blue moon he’ll take a stab at something and the caller says he’s right so I think he does it every time hoping this will be the one that goes viral and makes him look like a genius. Either that or he reads too deeply into every call.
You will find out more about your family in the first month after the death of a loved one than the previous 30-40 years. Sad, but true. In cases such as this, where the will is going to be contentious, folks really need to name their attorney as the executor. Having to deal with guilt trips and bickering with relatives is not a good situation to be in during an emotional time such as the death of a loved one. A few thousand dollars out of the estate to an attorney is money well spent in these cases.
Just because you are executor doesn't mean you can't hire an attorney, which I recommend you do. Probate has a timetable for specific actions being taken. Each state is different.
At first I thought Mike was going to say that his twin brother wanted some of the money, and that made me feel very sad. Glad that's not an issue. Still, it must be a very challenging situation to be in. It sounds like both twins were very lucky they were given up for adoption.
Also a really good realtor (like a Ramsey Trusted one) would guide you and tell you what is best for the condo. Having a rental property is great, but you have get a decent return or it may be better investing the money. They would be able to tell you, sell as-is, rent as-is, or fix up and sell or rent. My gut feeling is that “fire-selling” the property is not the best solution and fixing it up, if you are handy snd have some good trustworthy contractors may be the way to go.
So glad I'm not the only one who caught this. It was hilarious. I generally don't mind John introducing the psychological element if the caller volunteers that information first but when he just assumes something and then makes it about that (or tries to) it's aggravating.
Both are too emotional to give sound professional advice. Which generally distracts them from getting to the issues.. The caller who was stressed because of the situation had a better grip on solving his concerns.
His Uncle purposely laid out the Law of his Estate. Didn't include his sister & the other nephew. Sounds like when the Uncle was living his sister & that other nephew never treated him well. " The wicked earns deceptive wages, but one who sows righteousness gets a sure reward. "
My uncle has told me he is only including me and two of my first cousins in his will as far as nieces and nephews. He has a daughter (son died). I don’t think there will be any hard feelings about her inheritance but there will likely be towards us three cousins. He said he did it because he feels like he knows us more and has more of a relationship with us. When my paternal grandmother died she only left money for myself and one other cousin as far as grandchildren. We were the older grandchildren who lived relatively near her.
I agree with Ramsey Solutions on this issue. And caller needs to realize that whenever there is some money to be had from the deceased, people will come out of the woodwork demanding that they get everything. I also hope caller blows off any demands that he hand over his money after he receives it. He needs to remember the dearly departed's negative opinion of these people and honor his wishes by keeping what was left to him.
Saw this with my mom's parents. Once they died, my aunt (Mom's sister) basically raided everything they had. A few years prior they were too poor to help my parents get their father a decent car but had no issues helping themselves to the car my parents got them even though ny father drove a total piece of junk. Oddly they always had a nice new Lincoln car.
To your question about what you should do with the condo, if it’s in your budget and ability, I would fix it up a little and rent it. Extra income is always welcome.
It's looking like my nephew is gonna get everything and I really hope he doesn't share with the rest of the family. Final wishes should be respected and I hope it worked out for the dude.
Your solution is simple. You follow the will and you follow the trust exactly to the letter. Nobody is entitled to an inheritance when someone dies, and it’s the decedent’s money and property to do with what they want. Tell all others to screw off.
As long as you use a Legalese Administration Lawyer who records and monitors the documents instead of an easy to forge plain English Estate Planner who refuses to help when their Estate Plan cost our parents estate 50% in Billable Litigation Hours.
I thought he was going to say his disinterested twin wanted half. He never did specify whether his twin was adopted along with him. In any event, the twin isn’t relevant to the situation. Sounds like he got lucky being adopted away from the birth mother. Sad. My cousin adopted a baby. The woman already had a baby, and her teenage daughter had a baby at the same time she had this one, in the same hospital. She had her other kids with her in the room ordering meals, and milked all the hospital days she could. She balked at signing the paperwork in order to fleece them for every cent she could. Then she tried to steal their car seat. 🗑
My grandfather knew how his youngest son was.. so he put it in the will/trust that if anyone tries to take the trust to court to dispute it said person shall then only receive $1 and forfeits anything else 😂 I put it in mine too!
You are the successor trustee and it is your responsibility to execute the trust as it is written! A trust can not be contested and does not go through probate! You mentioned a will, did you misspeak? The trust rules in all cases. BTW, when signing any documents for the trust you must put TTEE after you signature to identify your role as the successor trustee. Very important!
I think what you are also missing here is he has a legal obligation to execute the will. Sharing any of it would go against what the uncle wanted and therefore he would be in breech if a moral obligation to his uncle. IE don’t share keep all the money, it’s what your Uncle would have wanted.
There's nothing messy with this inheritance as long as the legal documents are in order, which they appear to be. He can explain to the other family members what his uncles wishes were, and if they don't accept that, then doesn't have to let toxic people into his life. A messy inheritance would be if they received a portion of it.
My late father had a will and left a large estate with my youngest brother as executor. I saw the Will and also saw that it was witnessed and dated but not notarized. When my dad died my brother disposed on the Will except for the page where my father signed that he would be the executor. My brother let it be known “Everything is legally mine: the stocks, bonds, accounts, House, contents, land, etc.” I guess he was right as our dad put his name on those items. Sadly, my brother caused family discord as he either rewarded or punished siblings with “his” money. The moral to this story is: Don’t use one of those free library wills! They aren’t notarized or filed with an attorney. And they’re easily altered or destroyed. Pick your beneficiary very carefully! Pick someone who respects you and will abide by your wishes. My brother had no intention of carrying out our dad’s wishes. He often accused our father of using money to control others. But look who’s doing it now.....
My sister forged the trust and threw me on the street and the estate planner who promised peace of mind refused to help. Next time we're using a forgery proof Legalese Administration Lawyer with a NICER Permission Ledger Arbiter interdiction Trust.
There's some truth to that. In life u take chances. And he got lucky. I met a few of my bio family on my birth dad side and some are lovely and I was warned about others. I took heed to that warning and have not regretted it.
At 48 I discovered some of my birth family in 2022. Parents are deceased but I've met one aunt and a cousin. Talked to several more including my half brother. As was said it's a chance. I wanted to learn medical history and anything else is a bonus.
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Only the condo and the contents are his the car and money are intended for the caregiver that part should be dealt with first so that part of the problem is solved. Sell it all endless you plan on living there. It's just a albatross if you keep it.
It's always so awkward and funny when John tries to shoe horn a psychological element that's not there. And then it's not part of the equation at all. Like not everything has to have that psychoanalysis thing.
@@binkle1757 lol. And I think the thing that bugs me about how John goes about these things is that he doesn't simply ask the caller if that's what's on their mind, he just sort of like assumes it to be true and then starts giving advice off of that without even confirming whether or not that is even the problem. But it was also funny how quickly John abandoned that.
Yeah I know, "I'm hearing that you hate your mother, you wish you weren't married, you have taken on too much of a house payment, and you might be a closet homosexual from the tone of your voice". He really will be reaching
Lol he’s brought onto the show purely for the psychological perspective of these things. But he’s solid on his set show. But it isn’t always the best fit here.
He doesn’t have a messy inheritance, he has messy relationships. Keep the inheritance and relationships SEPARATE and the problem will solve itself because the relationships will dissolve
Twins should never be split up adopted out to separate families. This blood uncle obviously didn't like what his sister did by giving her twin boys out to be adopted by 2 separate families, - he probably observed much more outrageous behavior. This caller is lucky to have reconnected with his blood uncle and should carry out his uncle's wishes. I am an adoptee due to my blood father deserting my mother. I have met paternal blood relatives who have bad feelings toward the way my blood father left my blood pregnant mother. Please honor the wishes of your real blood uncle
People can leave such a mess for their family when they choose to delegate their assets by will to survivors unevenly. Regardless of how responsible the recipients are, it just leaves a mess for the recipients receiving more than another that can cause more grief than a person can endure in a family. Money and assets are just that. They are worthless to the person that accumulated the assets after they are gone. I have a story that can go on for quite a while about what I witnessed in my wife's family that not only tore the family apart but ended in the stressful death of three sisters. My wife was one of them. Money and assets are just so useless after we are gone. To maintain our lives in our golden years, yes, but after we are gone. they are useless. Don't leave a legacy of uneven love to your children! Thanks.
I live in Sweden. You cannot legally disinherit your children. You can give it away while you’re alive but after your death, they are entitled at least 50%.
Unless there are biological or legally adopted children, trusts are air tight. The only way to challenge a trust is to prove coercion, or cognitive decline.
I'm dealing with this issue right now, my father lent my uncle an apartment in my hometown of Algiers, then my uncle left to Canada with his wife, instead of returning the apartment back to my dad, his wife put her sister and husband there, my father didn't like it but didn't want to ruin the relationship, so he didn't ask for it back, and they've been there for 25 years, after my father died, I inherited the apartment, and I'm trying to get it back in an amicable manner, but my uncle ignored my messages, and calls. I'm now having to resort to a lawyer in order to get them out. This will ruin my relationship with my uncle, cousins, wife, and probably other family members. Even though I'm only asking for what is rightfully mine, as the title has been transfered to me. It's heartbreaking but I have to do what I have to do. 💔Thoughts/ Comments?
I'm so glad this guy met his uncle before he passed, he obviously was a sweet kind hearted guy, and got to have a deep connection with his nephew. I think they're both lucky having known each other!
Halfbrother and Mother are not entitled.
The uncle went to the trouble of writing not just a will, but a trust too. He obviously knew who he wanted to include and who he wanted to exclude. He was counting on the caller to follow his wishes.
BINGO - his job is to execute the wishes of the Uncle....period. This Uncle KNEW what he wanted.....and made is QUITE clear...LEGALLY.
Most wills families start fighting over what they deserve & who gets what. 😔
Yeah clearly he wasn't very fond of these other family members. I mean for someone to demand $100k in such a nasty way 🤦♂️
^This. If someone goes the extra step to enact a trust, your exclusion wasn't an oversight, it was a choice. He wanted to make it clear he wanted you to have NOTHING.
😔😔everybody start coming out the woods when money is involved.
It’s horrible my family fought over a few grand… sad
it really is sad how people are nowadays... ^^^^
@@briancallahan5673 They will fight over 20 bucks! And some will kill for less than that!
@@cb9d90 When it comes to money, anything goes!
lowlife
"Talk to the estate attorney" is what i told my half brother and sister, and the estate attorney was very accustomed to dealing with such issues.
We tried that when a greedy trustee changed his trust and he refused to help costing our family 50% of the estate in Billable Litigation Hours.
I was a nurse and it was awful to see familycoming out of the woods when someone got really sick..but had never ever visited or even sent a card
Very true what you say, I saw this hundreds and hundreds of times working in the nursing home for 27 years.
Saw the same when I worked as a hospice social worker.
Money makes greedy, mean people greedier and meaner.
It doesn't matter what the family says or want. Everything is in the will.
As Joe Stalin would say, it doesn't matter who writes the will, it's who reads it.
@Jimmy, when money is involved count on the family to contest the will. Learn something please.
Well, sometimes it doesn't, in my country, a will can be contested, and there are other laws that take precedence over a will, when my father died , his 2nd wife basically said she was going to take us to court to get ownership of the house my father left us and this is quite legal, there are provisions in the legal system for spouses, dependants to make a claim on the estate which overrule what is written in the will, so sometimes a will can be worthless unfortunately..... speaking from personal experience
Wills are useless. My dad had a second marriage. When he passed his second wife's kids moved their mom to a different state and changed their will. We were told wills vary from state to state. We lost my dad's money to her nasty kids who couldn't wait to get his money.
@@karenhardie1132 Same for prenups
We added a statement in our wills that if anyone, for any reason, contests the will, they are immediately and forever exempt from any proceeds. This was suggested by our trust attorney.
Good news... Hopefully should keep your heirs in line. Bad News... Just another lawyer ploy to increase their chances of further litigation by adding another layer.
That’s actually really dumb because there are often legitimate reasons to contest the execution of a will. For example if the executor does something that goes against your intentions then it would be valid to challenge it. Or if there is an ambiguity in your will and it’s interpreted against your intentions then it would be valid to challenge.
Why would you disinherit someone who challenges something that you would agree with if you were alive?
Kevin, your attorney just opened the door for further litigation which obviously puts more money in his pocket. Think about it.
Not sure this is legally binding but may scare some people from contesting.
Same here
A trust is way more powerful than a will.
Yes and if only had a will, would have to go through probate.
I'm so glad our little family all got along. When my grandmother died she had two surviving children, both married. She wasn't rich but she did have a pretty healthy bank account and some land. There were no issues, no drama.
Solid advice! I’m just the executor and can’t do anything about it
It's only messy in terms of the attempted guilt.
But it's very straightforward. You're the executor of the will and you have a moral obligation to carry out his wishes and not disrespect his memory by dishonoring his wishes.
Everyone else can go to kick rocks. It's what he wanted with his money so that's what you're doing. It was his choice not yours
More than moral obligation.. it’s a legal obligation!!
He is legally obligated to give the money to who it was designated to as the executor. But once they receive that money, they can choose to do with it whatever they want. So once he received his portion of the money as a person written into the will, he can now do what he wants with that portion. Of course he has no obligation to give any of it to them, but he is legally allowed to give his own portion of the inheritance to whoever he wants, and of course his family will know that. The executor just gets the money to the right person. They don't then tell those people how to spend it. And he got the money to himself. Now he can do what he wants with it.
@@kristencampbell5533 He said his uncle went to the trouble of creating a Trust. So it depends on how the trust is written, you can put stipulations/conditions on trust money. It's not always free and clear. So it kinda depends on what's in it.
As the estate executor,I'd tell them to take a hike. Besides,as the executor,legally you can't change anything in the will. Where's there's a will,there's a greedy relative.
As the executor, he has to give the money to the person it belongs to. Once that person receives the money, they can do whatever they want with it. Since HE is the one most of it belongs to, HE can do whatever he wants with his portion, which is what the relatives are going after. He has no legal obligation not to give his money to certain people - he can just choose not to.
Dave, you are right people aren't entitled to something if they are not in a will But the courts look at it differently. My Dad died and 7 years after his 4th wife died, her kids came after his estate when my Dad died. Even with the best attorneys, we were given few options by her kids. They wanted a payoff because he excluded them in his will even though their mother had died 7 years previously to my Dad. We went to court for a hearing and the first judge would not toss it out. He set up a trial date. My siblings and I were told if we go to trial his kids would liquidate the estate with continual appeals. Their basis was my Dad was abusive to their mother. Yet, they were married for 15 years and she never wanted out while they were alive. Revisionists made-up history about a dead person to make a quick buck.
“These two are gonna be goobs because they’re goobs.” There’s actually a lot of wisdom in that.
😂😂😂 Yep
The constant changing economic conditions in our society have made it necessary for people to find additional sources of income, thus I am looking at the stock market to fuel my retirement goal of $3m, my only concern is the unstable market.
For majority, the solution to their problem can be found in specialized knowledge, so can as well seek guidance from a well experienced advisor.
Despite my rookie knowledge of investing, I have a financial advisor who did the trick in a bit more than 6 months after a lump sum capital of $500k, and I've so far made a fortune. I'm now buying real estates, gold and silver as advised by my FA.
Truly appreciate the implementation of ideas and strategies that result to unmeasurable progress, thus the search for a reputable advisor, mind sharing info of this person guiding you please?
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"Go out to the graveyard and yell at the tombstone!!"🤣🤣🤣
Careful, they might yell back atcha!😊
😂😂😂
Good one!
There is a legal will naming him as the beneficiary… end of!
Unless any debts ( liens ). If not, then end of story.
Your uncle's will is very clear. Obey it
Travel agents for guilt trips. yes! Love that line.
This is why inheritance is too glorified. Most of the time it's a mess and destroys trust when greedy.
Inheritance money can cause a lot of upheaval in a family.
Always does!
I am dealing with a situation like this right now. My family is jealous that my aunt left her house to me. My siblings are upset about it and keep making snide remarks. My aunt hasn't even passed yet.
I'm sorry. It's hard because they are greedy. Why do they even know about it? None of their business
Don't let them alienate her to changing her wishes.
I liked what someone said. If they contest the will they will get nothing. Let aunt know she may put something similar in her will
Do not let these people upset you. Just be a kind person and take the home when it comes to you. I am so sorry you are in this situation.
😮
I feel for you. My husband and I get all my mothers possessions and finances. My sister insists it be split 3 ways with us daughters. I don't want to lose my sister...we'll see.
Contacting absent family members, regardless of the reason for their absence, is a 50/50 gamble. It could end up being the best life decision you have ever made, or the worst.
Where is it messy ? Your uncle legally appointed you and your wife . Your uncle told you his thoughts and opinions on others . You and your wife have been entrusted to carry out his wishes .
It’s always more difficult when you are in the situation
@@augustusplays7896 Currently in the situation. I have learned to be like a horse with blinders . I only see straight ahead. Not rude but firm .
Exactly..he should do what his uncle requested without question or bias. Simply respect his wishes...Period!
It’s not good content for the Ramsey show😂
Yeah this seems straight forward. The womb owner needs to take a hike.
Walk away singing:
I got along fine without you and I’ll get along fine without you now 🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶🎶
Whatever is in writing in the will and trust prevail.
Not anymore the Will and Trust are both made out of easy to forge paper and need a State Probate or NICER Prebate to stop the quit claim financial elder abusing title deed thieves.
Yep, David is correct to my way of thinking. Execute the will as it exists. And any gifts you make is on you. In my opinion, wrong.
My Mom and her Cousin was left a small fortune by their Grammy - The Cousin was determined to fight for all of "Grammy"s money & land, and hired an attorney - - Evidently there was no executor, or none appointed . . The lawyers "stole" every penny of the inheritence, and the Cousin was okay with that - she just didn't want my Mom to have anything. . . True colors shine brightest in the bank . .
John was getting ready to go to back to this guy's childhood but the caller was like " Nope."
He is always grasping at these nonexistent psychological straws.
But are you safe?! 😅
I was glad the guy spoke up and made it very clear that John was on the wrong train track.
@@kimberlydickson9266once in a blue moon he’ll take a stab at something and the caller says he’s right so I think he does it every time hoping this will be the one that goes viral and makes him look like a genius. Either that or he reads too deeply into every call.
You will find out more about your family in the first month after the death of a loved one than the previous 30-40 years. Sad, but true.
In cases such as this, where the will is going to be contentious, folks really need to name their attorney as the executor. Having to deal with guilt trips and bickering with relatives is not a good situation to be in during an emotional time such as the death of a loved one. A few thousand dollars out of the estate to an attorney is money well spent in these cases.
That's the best advice here! Every time, I've had a family member appointed the executor of a will emotions ALWAYS get involved.
Just because you are executor doesn't mean you can't hire an attorney, which I recommend you do. Probate has a timetable for specific actions being taken. Each state is different.
If there is a trust, the executor MUST do what’s in the trust. No making up rules
An executor can refuse and a third party not related such as legal person or trust company can be appointed.
Of course they can decline to be trustee (executor is for the will) but if hs is the trustee be must follow the trust
Takers will try to take everything they can get their hands on and will use warped logic to justify their actions. The will/trust say it all.
I wish I would of seen this video before my mom passed away .I would of saved myself a lot of money.
At first I thought Mike was going to say that his twin brother wanted some of the money, and that made me feel very sad. Glad that's not an issue. Still, it must be a very challenging situation to be in. It sounds like both twins were very lucky they were given up for adoption.
He said the twin told him to sell the property and give him 100000. So he was asking for some of the money
@@ghshrug2029No that was the half brother (the one bio mom kept).
Also a really good realtor (like a Ramsey Trusted one) would guide you and tell you what is best for the condo. Having a rental property is great, but you have get a decent return or it may be better investing the money. They would be able to tell you, sell as-is, rent as-is, or fix up and sell or rent. My gut feeling is that “fire-selling” the property is not the best solution and fixing it up, if you are handy snd have some good trustworthy contractors may be the way to go.
Dr D was trying to grasp at straws that weren’t there. Per usual. And the caller shut him down instantly. That was great to watch
He’s the most useless and egotistical personality. I wish they would get rid of him.
So glad I'm not the only one who caught this. It was hilarious. I generally don't mind John introducing the psychological element if the caller volunteers that information first but when he just assumes something and then makes it about that (or tries to) it's aggravating.
Psychologists always do that
Both are too emotional to give sound professional advice. Which generally distracts them from getting to the issues.. The caller who was stressed because of the situation had a better grip on solving his concerns.
@@SW-ty8zq So did you have some issues with a therapist? 😂
His Uncle purposely laid out the Law of his Estate. Didn't include his sister & the other nephew. Sounds like when the Uncle was living his sister & that other nephew never treated him well. " The wicked earns deceptive wages, but one who sows righteousness gets a sure reward. "
My uncle has told me he is only including me and two of my first cousins in his will as far as nieces and nephews. He has a daughter (son died). I don’t think there will be any hard feelings about her inheritance but there will likely be towards us three cousins. He said he did it because he feels like he knows us more and has more of a relationship with us. When my paternal grandmother died she only left money for myself and one other cousin as far as grandchildren. We were the older grandchildren who lived relatively near her.
Great Show!
Dave
Trying to tell him to use reason with a crazy lady.
LoL
"Goobs gonna goob"
- Dave Ramsey
I agree with Ramsey Solutions on this issue. And caller needs to realize that whenever there is some money to be had from the deceased, people will come out of the woodwork demanding that they get everything. I also hope caller blows off any demands that he hand over his money after he receives it. He needs to remember the dearly departed's negative opinion of these people and honor his wishes by keeping what was left to him.
This video has valuable information about executors of wills!
Saw this with my mom's parents. Once they died, my aunt (Mom's sister) basically raided everything they had. A few years prior they were too poor to help my parents get their father a decent car but had no issues helping themselves to the car my parents got them even though ny father drove a total piece of junk. Oddly they always had a nice new Lincoln car.
A will and a trust (revocable or irrevocable) are NOT the same! They are treated very differently in the eyes of the law! Do not confuse them.
To your question about what you should do with the condo, if it’s in your budget and ability, I would fix it up a little and rent it. Extra income is always welcome.
Needed this. Thank you sir.
He didn’t want them to have it. And legally made this clear. I do recommend selling the condo, but it’s your money.
Yup.
Blame it on the rain
4:11 that's the answer!!👏👏👏
It's looking like my nephew is gonna get everything and I really hope he doesn't share with the rest of the family. Final wishes should be respected and I hope it worked out for the dude.
"These two goobs are just gonna be goobs!" 😆
Any non-equal distribution under a will can leave it open to a will challenge... Be prepared for a nasty fight!!
Your solution is simple. You follow the will and you follow the trust exactly to the letter. Nobody is entitled to an inheritance when someone dies, and it’s the decedent’s money and property to do with what they want. Tell all others to screw off.
As long as you use a Legalese Administration Lawyer who records and monitors the documents instead of an easy to forge plain English Estate Planner who refuses to help when their Estate Plan cost our parents estate 50% in Billable Litigation Hours.
I will never understand why people don’t tell other people they made them executors of their estate before they die!
Because it can change.
@@elenak2963 what? How does that make sense?
I think it is often because they want to know the real intentions of the person and if you name them the executor they start acting differently.
@@elenak2963 Exactly!!!!!
Why does Dr. JD always insist in speaking over the guest when they try explain
I thought he was going to say his disinterested twin wanted half. He never did specify whether his twin was adopted along with him. In any event, the twin isn’t relevant to the situation. Sounds like he got lucky being adopted away from the birth mother. Sad. My cousin adopted a baby. The woman already had a baby, and her teenage daughter had a baby at the same time she had this one, in the same hospital. She had her other kids with her in the room ordering meals, and milked all the hospital days she could. She balked at signing the paperwork in order to fleece them for every cent she could. Then she tried to steal their car seat. 🗑
Respect your sweet uncles wishes God rest his soul. Period. These family members are selfish.
this isnt messy what so ever. its cut and dry. even legally. hes just feeling guilt tripped
My grandfather knew how his youngest son was.. so he put it in the will/trust that if anyone tries to take the trust to court to dispute it said person shall then only receive $1 and forfeits anything else 😂 I put it in mine too!
You are the successor trustee and it is your responsibility to execute the trust as it is written! A trust can not be contested and does not go through probate! You mentioned a will, did you misspeak? The trust rules in all cases. BTW, when signing any documents for the trust you must put TTEE after you signature to identify your role as the successor trustee. Very important!
it is still possible to contest a trust.
I think what you are also missing here is he has a legal obligation to execute the will. Sharing any of it would go against what the uncle wanted and therefore he would be in breech if a moral obligation to his uncle. IE don’t share keep all the money, it’s what your Uncle would have wanted.
There's nothing messy with this inheritance as long as the legal documents are in order, which they appear to be. He can explain to the other family members what his uncles wishes were, and if they don't accept that, then doesn't have to let toxic people into his life. A messy inheritance would be if they received a portion of it.
How much do you know about easy to forge Estate Plan Trust and Will?
My late father had a will and left a large estate with my youngest brother as executor. I saw the Will and also saw that it was witnessed and dated but not notarized. When my dad died my brother disposed on the Will except for the page where my father signed that he would be the executor. My brother let it be known “Everything is legally mine: the stocks, bonds, accounts, House, contents, land, etc.” I guess he was right as our dad put his name on those items. Sadly, my brother caused family discord as he either rewarded or punished siblings with “his” money.
The moral to this story is: Don’t use one of those free library wills! They aren’t notarized or filed with an attorney. And they’re easily altered or destroyed. Pick your beneficiary very carefully! Pick someone who respects you and will abide by your wishes. My brother had no intention of carrying out our dad’s wishes. He often accused our father of using money to control others. But look who’s doing it now.....
My sister forged the trust and threw me on the street and the estate planner who promised peace of mind refused to help. Next time we're using a forgery proof Legalese Administration Lawyer with a NICER Permission Ledger Arbiter interdiction Trust.
This guy should count his blessings that his mother was smart enough to surrender him at birth.
This is an example of why as an adopted child I’ve never even been slightly tempted to meet my biological family.
Yet this adopted child reached out to his biological family and got some cash moneyyy.
@@mikeyj1983It may not be worth the headache
There's some truth to that. In life u take chances. And he got lucky. I met a few of my bio family on my birth dad side and some are lovely and I was warned about others. I took heed to that warning and have not regretted it.
At 48 I discovered some of my birth family in 2022. Parents are deceased but I've met one aunt and a cousin. Talked to several more including my half brother. As was said it's a chance. I wanted to learn medical history and anything else is a bonus.
@@JustBree716 love this. I'm in a similar position now and I found some more receptive than others but it's their choice too
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LOL Ive learned to see these setup threads coming from a mile away...
This is simple. There's a trust and a will. Just follow them. Easy.
Lol Dave! Go yell at the tombstone! good one!
Blame the will and take a trip to the bank... Your uncle wanted you to have it and it's legally and rightfully yours.
Change phone number and zip code too
Amazing video, A friend of mine referred me to a financial adviser sometime ago and we got to talking about investment and money. I started investing with $150k and in the first 2 months, my portfolio was reading $274,800. Crazy right!, I decided to reinvest my profit and get more interesting. For over a year we have been working together making consistent profit just bought my second home 2 weeks ago and care for my family.
Hi. I’ve been forced to find additional sources of income as I got retrenched. I barely have time to continue trading and watch my investments since I had my second child. Do you think I should take a break for a while from the market and focus on other things or return whenever I have free time or is it a continuous process? Thanks
@@Lourd-Bab However, if you do not have access to a professional like JUDITH ANN PEACE, quitting your job to focus on trading may not be the best approach. It is important to consider all options and seek guidance from reliable sources before making any major decisions. Consulting with an AI or using automated trading systems can also be helpful in managing investments while balancing other commitments.
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@@Lourd-Bab Judith Ann peace is her name
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Only the condo and the contents are his the car and money are intended for the caregiver that part should be dealt with first so that part of the problem is solved. Sell it all endless you plan on living there. It's just a albatross if you keep it.
5:50 exactly what I am going through but with my sister smh
The moral of the story
If you’re adopted and have a good family, don’t go looking for your bio
Just do your job, I feel so sympathetic, I so understand. Get it done and leave them in the past.
When a parent remarries, the original children will likely end up with practically nothing.
No not if a well done will is done no one has to leave everything to their spouse
I would of laughed when the half brother said to send him $100k immigrants 🤣
I’d send him a 100 grand candy bar
If there is money involved, everyone wants it.
This man needs to do exactly what his uncle wanted. How can he NOT?
This is why lawyers kill it in Southern Cali.
And everywhere else in the dump that is the USA
And Florida
My cousin just 2 weeks ago inherited $50,000. He has a gambling problem and now it is all gone in just 2 weeks.
If theres a will they cant even file a law suit
Not so, wills are contested all the time.
For some reason, vultures tend to forget that everyone dies. Be careful how you treat the living.
It's always so awkward and funny when John tries to shoe horn a psychological element that's not there. And then it's not part of the equation at all. Like not everything has to have that psychoanalysis thing.
Yeah, the caller is like, NO
@@binkle1757 lol.
And I think the thing that bugs me about how John goes about these things is that he doesn't simply ask the caller if that's what's on their mind, he just sort of like assumes it to be true and then starts giving advice off of that without even confirming whether or not that is even the problem.
But it was also funny how quickly John abandoned that.
Yeah I know, "I'm hearing that you hate your mother, you wish you weren't married, you have taken on too much of a house payment, and you might be a closet homosexual from the tone of your voice". He really will be reaching
@@Vub.he give an either or option, the first option isn’t it and that was the end of it.
Lol he’s brought onto the show purely for the psychological perspective of these things. But he’s solid on his set show. But it isn’t always the best fit here.
He doesn’t have a messy inheritance, he has messy relationships. Keep the inheritance and relationships SEPARATE and the problem will solve itself because the relationships will dissolve
Dr. Baloney tried to come in with his mumbo jumbo and got shut down 😂
Twins should never be split up adopted out to separate families. This blood uncle obviously didn't like what his sister did by giving her twin boys out to be adopted by 2 separate families, - he probably observed much more outrageous behavior. This caller is lucky to have reconnected with his blood uncle and should carry out his uncle's wishes. I am an adoptee due to my blood father deserting my mother. I have met paternal blood relatives who have bad feelings toward the way my blood father left my blood pregnant mother. Please honor the wishes of your real blood uncle
Goobs gonna goob
People can leave such a mess for their family when they choose to delegate their assets by will to survivors unevenly. Regardless of how responsible the recipients are, it just leaves a mess for the recipients receiving more than another that can cause more grief than a person can endure in a family. Money and assets are just that. They are worthless to the person that accumulated the assets after they are gone. I have a story that can go on for quite a while about what I witnessed in my wife's family that not only tore the family apart but ended in the stressful death of three sisters. My wife was one of them. Money and assets are just so useless after we are gone. To maintain our lives in our golden years, yes, but after we are gone. they are useless. Don't leave a legacy of uneven love to your children! Thanks.
Bravo!
No wonder his twin wants nothing to do with them.
I live in Sweden. You cannot legally disinherit your children. You can give it away while you’re alive but after your death, they are entitled at least 50%.
Wow! Even if the children had nothing to do with their parents?
About the same in Norway. Here the children are entitled to 2/3.
A persons wishes in entirety need to be disclosed in writing exactly how the deceased wanted.
Unless there are biological or legally adopted children, trusts are air tight. The only way to challenge a trust is to prove coercion, or cognitive decline.
If he gave them money, wouldn’t the gift tax come into play?
Wow these people are evil 👿 sounds like they just want his stuff and the didn’t even have a relationship involved with the uncle.
Yup, the love for money wins again
YOU DO NOT make others executors to youR will unless they agree and have a copy of said will
You mean you shouldn't. It's isn't a requirement.
I'm dealing with this issue right now, my father lent my uncle an apartment in my hometown of Algiers, then my uncle left to Canada with his wife, instead of returning the apartment back to my dad, his wife put her sister and husband there, my father didn't like it but didn't want to ruin the relationship, so he didn't ask for it back, and they've been there for 25 years, after my father died, I inherited the apartment, and I'm trying to get it back in an amicable manner, but my uncle ignored my messages, and calls. I'm now having to resort to a lawyer in order to get them out. This will ruin my relationship with my uncle, cousins, wife, and probably other family members. Even though I'm only asking for what is rightfully mine, as the title has been transfered to me. It's heartbreaking but I have to do what I have to do. 💔Thoughts/ Comments?
@mrbest1981, As you said, you're only doing what you have to do, and there is nothing wrong with that in my opinion.
6:57 yup exactly
6:30 exactly what im going through