Property Management Trust
THE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT TRUST
A Will does not necessarily guarantee your children
will inherit all your hard earned wealth.
Lets take the typical case of Mr and Mrs Smith.
The reason they made a Will
was to provide for each other and then their
two children - very sensible. In the course
of time Mr Smith died leaving Mrs Smith to inherit
according to the terms of the Will.
Sometime later Mrs Smith met someone and they
decided to marry. The children were happy for
their mother’s newfound happiness. Finally
though the former Mrs Smith died.
The result was that her second husband under
the Laws of Intestacy and her children lost
out took the majority of the inheritance.
The question is why did Mr and Mrs Smith make
the Will
in the first place? Wasn’t it to take
care of each other and then to pass on all the
hard earned inheritance
to the children? Was not that Mr Smith’s
intention? Why didn’t it happen?
Most couples own their home as ‘Joint
Tenants’. This means
that if one joint owner dies the survivor would
own the total value outright irrespective of
what might be written in a Will.
The alternative is ‘Tenancy
in Common’. This means
that each party owns a share of the property
and can deal with it as they wish. The difference
with this arrangement is that your children
would be guaranteed to inherit
at least some of the value of your home. This
arrangement will also protect your share of
the family home if your partner were to later
remarry. A Property Trust incorporated within
your Will
would guarantee a right of residency to your
spouse thus taking care of her/him but would
not allow your share of the home to be passed
to anyone other than your
children.
Lets tell the story of Mr and Mrs Smith again.
Mr and Mrs Smith requested Acuity Will Writers
to sever the tenancy of their home and make
them ‘Tenants in Common’. Mr and
Mrs Smith each made a Will
incorporating a Property Trust to provide for
each other and then their two children - very
sensible. In the course of time Mr Smith died
leaving Mrs Smith to inherit
according to the terms of the Will.
Sometime later Mrs Smith met someone and they
decided to marry. The children were happy for
their mother’s new found happiness. Finally
though the former Mrs Smith died.
Mr Smith’s Will
thoughtfully gave his wife a life interest in
his share of the property. This was to ensure
she would be taken care of during her lifetime,
which she was. When she passed away his Will
stated that his portion was to revert back to
his children, to ensure his children would always
inherit which is what happened. Everything went
according to plan, and the beneficiaries lived
happily ever after.
This also helps should one of you require nursing
home care as only their share of the property
would be taken into account, therefore preserving
the share of the partner.
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