General Chat
Welcome to the Genes Reunited community boards!
- The Genes Reunited community is made up of millions of people with similar interests. Discover your family history and make life long friends along the way.
- You will find a close knit but welcoming group of keen genealogists all prepared to offer advice and help to new members.
- And it's not all serious business. The boards are often a place to relax and be entertained by all kinds of subjects.
- The Genes community will go out of their way to help you, so don’t be shy about asking for help.
Quick Search
Single word search
Icons
- New posts
- No new posts
- Thread closed
- Stickied, new posts
- Stickied, no new posts
Did you know?
| Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
|---|---|---|---|
|
goldielocks | Report | 5 Jul 2011 12:03 |
|
After loosing a member of my family,we found out he didnt make a will! yet he was always talking about it..Now it seems that if you do not have a will,your assets (if not married) will go to next of kin,um you say well that sounds fair,if parents are deceased,siblings share,but what you dont know is that if the father remarries,and the wife brings kids from another marriage and he adopts them, then you have to share the assets with them..even though you may have never met them...So make a will everyone, otherwise it brings alot of heartache to the living.I dont know how it works in the UK,but in Australia this is how things work.. |
|||
|
Rambling | Report | 5 Jul 2011 12:12 |
|
Good advice, also to be aware that if you make a will and appoint a solicitor as the executor, you may well find that your OH, next of kin, will be left without the money for 'a year and a day'. |
|||
Researching: |
|||
|
goldielocks | Report | 5 Jul 2011 12:19 |
|
yes you are so right,some solicitors are grubs...in my case already its going to cost hundered of thousands of dollars just for the grubs to go through it.. (he would oh hated how things turned out .) |
|||
|
Potty | Report | 5 Jul 2011 12:28 |
|
Having your assets in joint names (house, main bank account, savings and other investments) means that the survivor still has access to them. |
|||
|
goldielocks | Report | 5 Jul 2011 12:35 |
|
Potty, |
|||
|
Island | Report | 5 Jul 2011 12:40 |
|
What's the problem with sharing assets with your dads adopted children? He must have cared about them to want to be their legal father. |
|||
Researching: |
|||
|
Potty | Report | 5 Jul 2011 12:46 |
|
goldielocks, |
|||
|
goldielocks | Report | 5 Jul 2011 12:52 |
|
The problem is that the father walked out on his own children and never looked back,when the father died his own children got nothing from his will,,it ALL went to his adopted daughter, fair is it..? And also they were only informed of his death after they had his funeral.. You are right no one should expect anything when a life has passed over,its a gift.. |
|||
|
Island | Report | 5 Jul 2011 12:58 |
|
Joint bank acounts aren't frozen if one party is still alive. They still have bills to pay! |
|||
Researching: |
|||
|
goldielocks | Report | 5 Jul 2011 12:58 |
|
potty. no not in the UK, our law is different. Dont know if its better or not.. |
|||
|
Island | Report | 5 Jul 2011 13:02 |
|
To be honest Goldilocks, I wouldn't want anything from a father who had walked out on me and never looked back. :-) |
|||
Researching: |
|||
|
StrayKitten | Report | 5 Jul 2011 13:07 |
|
if any of my loved ones pass, i wouldnt want anything, i would rather have them here, so if somone else benfited from there death as long as it was my loved ones wishes then id be happy, |
|||
Researching: |
|||
|
goldielocks | Report | 5 Jul 2011 13:13 |
|
yes Island ! |
|||
|
AnninGlos | Report | 5 Jul 2011 13:17 |
|
Goldilocks, I think in the UK, if somebody dies intestate there are strict rules of inheritance. If there is no living spouse but living children they would all share the inheritance, adopted and natural children. No one child would inherit the lot. And if one of the children had died and was married their share would be inherited by their next of kin I think. |
|||
Researching: |
|||
|
JoyBoroAngel | Report | 5 Jul 2011 13:23 |
|
when my father dies it took nearly 4 years to sort out |
|||
Researching: |
|||
|
Island | Report | 5 Jul 2011 13:24 |
|
Goldielocks, |
|||
Researching: |
|||
|
TeresaW | Report | 5 Jul 2011 14:14 |
|
Its difficult to have any point of view on Goldilocks' situation without being in posession of the full facts, and all too often we are only getting a one-sided perspective. |
|||
Researching: |
|||
|
goldielocks | Report | 6 Jul 2011 00:44 |
|
Thanks everyone for your feelings on this matter,it has opened my eyes..I also have a adopted sister and love her equal,but she was raised from a baby in our family,and I feel no different to her as my blood sister,so its not that Iam against any adoption at all, in this case its the fact there wasnt a will,and what you think is straight forward is not the case.. I just want people to be aware.. make a will, dont put it off, and say later ,because my family member died in his sleep,and he was young...you just dont know what the next day brings.. |
|||
|
maggiewinchester | Report | 6 Jul 2011 01:07 |
|
I made a will years ago, and haven't updated it yet. |
|||
Researching: |
|||
|
goldielocks | Report | 7 Jul 2011 01:29 |
|
Maggiewinchester |
|||