My grandmother recently died, very quickly. I moved in with my grandma when I was 10 due to my mothers inabilities to support herself and I. She continued to take care of my grandma until she died. So my mother has lived there 19 years now. Her brother is the executor of the estate. There are also 2 other sisters, so 4 children in all. And four grandchildren total.
All of my aunts and uncle split the (roughly 2+ million) estate four ways according to the will. Now the messy part.
1, my uncle asked my mom to move out 3 months after my grandma died. Despite my mother being close to destitute and with nowhere to go, having not lived on her own in almost 20 years.
2, my mother is TERRIBLE WITH MONEY. She not only blew through my college fund, but much inheritance given to her from her own grandparents, etc. I would say over a million? So understandably living in poverty with her growing up I am very concerned about her ability to make good decisions with this allotment. She's in her 60s with no savings and no retirement and no insurance even. Just this recent inheritance. I asked my uncle to help me set up some kind of fund, or enforce a spendthrift law so that she would get an annuity vs. lump some. He refused, and blatantly said he didn't give a shit. THEN my mom dropped off over 4k worth of christmas presents last week. My partner and I exchanged all the gifts and set up a savings account for her.
3. My grandma's will was rewritten 3 years ago, just after her major stroke. My 3 cousins and I were the only ones removed from the will (my uncle has no children, and cowrote the will). I am not concerned about the money I stood to inherit. I am doing fine. But I do think the conditions were very upsetting. And suspicious.
4. My cousins and at least one of my aunts do not want my uncle to sell my grandmas house. I cannot speak to my mother about it without her crying. The house has been in the family almost 100 years. I know my grandma would not want it sold. My partner and I could buy out at least one relative. I just want to keep it in the family, I don't care which family member lives there, or if it's rented - which would turn a profit.
I've decided not to attend the last christmas in my grandmothers house. I loved my grandmother very much, she raised me. My mother is bipolar. So not only is it upsetting to be there without my grandma, I'm so overcome with anger towards my uncle and my mother I can't bear it. I'm at the point of never talking to my family (except cousins who I am close with) again, due to the property and money issues. Help. I just need some perspective besides my boyfriend "there's nothing you can do".
Re: Inheritance/family scuffle
To help protect your mom you may want to talk to a lawyer to see if there is a way you can become your mom's liason or guardian or something that can give you control over your mom's finances.OK, maybe control is the wrong word to use but something that can give you the right to help out your mom with her finances. Talking to a financial advisor could also be helpful. I'm sure there is some type of accounts that would be low risk that you could invest your mom's money in where she could get a monthly payout from for her to life off. This way she will have money to live on but not have access to it all at once and be able to just blow through it. But with the understanding that any withdrawls beyond the normal scheduled ones need to be co-signed by you.
If moving her in with you and your boyfriend isn't an option, then I would look into other options such as assisted living facilities or maybe even a group home where she could have her own space but there are people there to make sure she eats regularly and takes her meds. I know by me they have different levels of assisted living starting out as simple as a one bedroom apartment with a very basic kitchen. They have staff make sure they take their meds everyday but there is a cafe where meals are available if the resident doesn't want to or can't cook. Plus they have group activites too.
Good luck, unfortunately due to how my aunt handled the money from my Grandmother's estate after she passed, there has been major family issues to the point where lawyers were involved and people taken to court. Now no one is speaking to each other.
Does your mom recognize her inability to handle money/herself? Because you can become her financial guardian (this may vary from state to state) if she chooses, but if she doesn't choose to, than you would need it to be court ordered. How bad is her mental illness? Is it bad enough to qualify for SSA disability/other benefits?
Agree with PP. Your uncle can pretty much do as he pleases unless you take him to court, unfortunately, so there's not much you can really do about that. But you can try to help your mom out.
I wonder how the will was able to be rewritten after your grandmothers stroke. I'm more familiar with the healthcare power of attorney's than financial POA/wills. Was she still considered legally competent at that time?
So sorry you're going through this. It sounds so stressful.
The executor has to follow legal guidelines. He does not have to consider the feelings nor preferences of those family members who are upset with the choices.
Was your uncle involved with your grandmother's care, responsibilities etc?
YOU need to see a lawyer about your mother and addressing the financial handling of money for the remainder of her life and how to go about that - preferably with your mom's support of a plan that will see that she is cared for thru the remainder of her life. this is not your uncle's role nor should it be.
(You lived in poverty with a grandmother worth more than 2 million??? - Doesn't sound like poverty to me.)
The executor has to follow legal guidelines. He does not have to consider the feelings nor preferences of those family members who are upset with the choices.
Was your uncle involved with your grandmother's care, responsibilities etc?
YOU need to see a lawyer about your mother and addressing the financial handling of money for the remainder of her life and how to go about that - preferably with your mom's support of a plan that will see that she is cared for thru the remainder of her life. this is not your uncle's role nor should it be.
(You lived in poverty with a grandmother worth more than 2 million??? - Doesn't sound like poverty to me.)
As for your mom, if you offered to "help" her house-hunt, would she take you up on it? It sounds like she'll inherit enough to get a reasonable condo outright.
Good luck working through all of this!