Some Trustees ask beneficiaries to sign a waiver of accounting before making Trust distributions. Occasionally, if there are multiple beneficiaries, some of the beneficiaries may be happy to waive a formal accounting, while one beneficiary refuses. What happens if one of the beneficiaries refuses to sign a waiver of accounting? If one beneficiary refuses to […]
Category: Inheritance Theft
What do you do when a trustee refuses to give you the financial documents you are entitled to as a beneficiary? Isn’t the trustee required to give you financial information? The answer is simple: YES. The trustee has a duty to keep beneficiaries reasonably informed about the trust administration and assets. If you request financial […]
Are you having a hard time receiving your inheritance? You are a named beneficiary of a trust and you are entitled to an inheritance. You should just be handed your share of the money… right? Yet a year has passed, maybe several… and you still have not received your inheritance. Why is it so hard […]
Three words: burden of proof. You have it and the other side does not. If you put on your case in a Trust contest and fail to meet your burden of proof, you lose. Losing is your default position. Winning is the default position of your opponent. They don’t have to put on a case. They […]
If you are trying to overturn a Trust or Will (or an amendment to a Trust or Will), you will find that your relationship with the decedent is going to be a big issue in your case. But what does it matter if you had a good relationship with the decedent? Legal Grounds for Overturning […]
Formal accountings can take up a lot of your time. When we say “formal accounting” we are referring to a Trust accounting that is prepared according to the format rules of the Probate Code (section 1060) and filed with the court to court approval. Why do formal accountings take so long to resolve? First, it […]
Yes and no. Pre-death accountings refer to an accounting for the period before your parent died. If there was a Trustee other than your parent, you may be able to obtain an accounting of their activity prior to a parent’s death. But getting a pre-death accounting is not absolute. The problem is that while your […]
When a bad actor intervenes in your parent’s life to orchestrate a change in their estate plans—a change your parents didn’t want—we call that inheritance theft. It is the fastest growing area of theft among elders. And it often happens when you least expect it. It can be hard to detect and even harder to […]