Champy said:
Lesson learned for me....now everything I have is "owned" by a Trust with multiple owners (wife, kids, me, etc..), to avoid Probate / issues with Wills.
Unfortunate path you had to take to get here but power to you for doing what I personally feel, is the best choice.
Interstingly enough, I've had many people say "I don't have enough money to need/use a trust"
I just shake my head... and try to explain to them that although a trust REALLY comes in handy if you've got a zillion dollars.... it has other benefits that it will provide for you or your loved ones if you DONT have the specific 'financial' need for it.
The funny part is... I'm not an attorney and if anyone ever listened to me as I play my pied piper role... I don't make a dime off it... so it's not like I'm trying to sell them anything regarding a trust... I'm really trying to give them my opinion on something that I feel will (potentially) save their loved ones some REAL hassels.
I once had a guy walk into office... he held I think six stock certificates in his hand. Some of the certificates were in his fathers name (deceased 20 years prior), mother and fathers name (mother deceased recently), mother and HIS name
I swear on my life... it took us about six MONTHS to clear these darn certificates up so they could be deposited into HIS account.
He had to go back and revisit his FATHERS estate from 20 years prior... to get the certificates out of his dad's name. This was the real stinker for him. Then after that, he of course, had to deal with taking care of his mothers estate stuff....
Had his mother dealt with this decades prior, then we could have taken care of him in a matter of a handful of forms and couple of weeks.
(side lesson there is don't take delivery of your certificates or if you DO have some, then shove them back into an account...it's MUCH easier for the owner to sign the certificate than a beneficary to have to get a court certified letter of testamentary, state tax waivers, stock powers....)
Double side lesson...
If someone DOES have to deposit certificates into an account after a loved one passes away...
I need a court certified letter of testamentary LESS than 30 days old, a tax waiver (depending on state, in TN, we need them), stock power... for EACH AND EVERY certificate that is being deposited. If you, or your grandparent has 25 different stock certificates (different companies) then I'd need 25 SETS of each of the above documents...
If however... the owner of the stocks THEMSELVES, put them into a stock account, then the person can sign them (or a stock power), deposit them and upon their demise... I would only need ONE SINGLE set of all that paperwork to rename the account and NOT a set of forms for each asset inside the account.
Now... if someone is giving YOU 25 different certificates, would you rather provide 25 sets of forms for me, or a single set?
If the answer is a single set and YOU have 25 different stock certificates in your name and in YOUR posession, then I'd ask you... why do you hate your children so much?

GO deposit them NOW!!
