wellpick.com wellpick.com
Search:    Site Home :> About Us :> Privacy Policy :> ToS :> Add Url :> Add Article   
 

An Estate Planning Primer

An estate is the total value of everything we own--and business and personal assets can add up quick ... - Bill Willard
 

What to Look for in a Home

Searching for just the right home can be very exciting. You may plan ahead for the number of bedroom ... - Nicole Soltau
 

Top Tips for Buying and Selling a Home

The process of buying or selling a home is simplified by seasoned real estate broker and author Mark ... - Mark Nash
 
 

Off Plan Investments in Bahia Brazil

Buying off plan Real Estate in Bahia Brazil offers many opportunities.More and more investors are no ... - Alexander Willi
 

Costa Rica Real Estate Investment ?C 6 Reasons Why Capital Growth Will Continue

Real estate investment in Costa Rica is starting to grow dramatically as the attractions of the livi ... - Sacha Tarkovsky
 

Selecting an Advantageous Trusts and Estate Lawyer

Briefly describes how to find the right attorney to handle trusts and estate planning. - Ronald Hudkins
 

Homes For Sell By Owner - FSBOs and Buyer Brokers

Youre selling your home as a FSBO (for sale by owner) and you get annoyed when real estate brokers c ... - Raynor James
 

An Introduction To Real Estate Investment Software

A number of people choose to buy property with the intention of selling it at a later date. Buyers h ... - Josh Riverside
 
 

Site Home –› Estate & Realty –› Real Estate Planning
 

Estate Planning - Undue Influence

 

Often during the final years of a dear friends or relatives life some person or persons will take over the task of caring for their sick and elderly friend or relative to a greater degree than the other people in their lives. This is sometimes due to sheer geography where the aged or sick person lives nearer to one set of relatives than to another. In addition, some relatives or friends may be better suited to dealing with the realities of sickness, age and dying than are others. There are some people who do not have the temperament to be care givers for those they love dearly, because they cannot bear to see a parent decay and succumb to age and death, particularly if the process is prolonged.

Those who are elderly, sick and in need often attempt to show their gratitude for the care that they are being given through bequests in their will. It seems only fair that the relative who is actually caring for their loved one should be rewarded by the one who is being cared for. However, there is the potential that the other heirs want an equal share of the bequest regardless of who took care of whom in the final days of a persons life. Sometimes, for no other reason than that they want to feel that they were loved equally and view an equal share of the will as a demonstration of that.

When this happens, a common means of contesting a will is employed that involves a claim of undue influence. This claim is essentially grounded in the idea that a relative exercised an extreme amount of coercive ability with respect to the deceased. It must be true that the person who is claimed to have undue influence also received an undue benefit. Undue Influence is usually combined with a claim of lack of capacity in one form or the other. The less forceful the waning personality of the deceased becomes in the eyes of the courts, the easier it is to establish the dominance that the undue influencer had over that person. After all, it is difficult to say that a strong, healthy, fully cognizant adult was duped by his/her insidious caregiver.

To be sure, there are people who try to take advantage of those whom they care for, but there are a great many claims of undue influence raised by those that simply didnt pay attention to their elderly loved ones, yet expect and equal share of the bequest. Another interesting facet of undue influence claims is that they can involve the degenerated mental state of the will maker without relating that state to the property or to whom it goes. Part of the undue influence claim is showing that the person being influenced was addled and that the person doing the influencing used that to their advantage. This is unfortunate, because the elderly often become more absent minded or less mentally acute than they once were, and yet they may still be attempting to reward a relative who has come to their aid when it mattered to them the most.

Undue Influence is also shown by proving an opportunity to exercise such influence. In one case a test of psychological domination was used to prove undue influence. But, the central question is always whether an unwarranted coercive force or ability existed and was exercised. This is problematic, in that there may be one child or relative whose advice really is important to the will maker, but that fact is not attendant to undue influence so much as a general respect for that persons counsel.

Author: Ronald Hudkins
 
Author Bio:
Ronald Hudkins is an expert on this subject. Ronald has written several articles in the past on this topic.
This article can be searched using: elderly estate planning, real estate management, estate planning info
 
 
 

Related Articles

 
A Tucson Area Realtor - Your Guide to the Metropolitan Area
 
Buying and Selling Real Estate in Florida
 
New Cyprus Residents - Make Sure You Know Who Will Inherit Your Estate
 
Construction Online
 
New Age Township
 
Essential Tips for Real Estate Appraisals
 
Motivated Sellers - How To Find One
 
Putting your Estate in Order
 
Selling Your Home on Your Own?
 
What is Premium for Tax Lien Certificates?
 
 
 
Multiple links exchange
 

Business & Commerce

Investment & Finance

Culture & Art

Events & News

Research & Science

Hygiene & Health

Lifestyle & Fashion

Estate & Realty

Self Management

Tour & Travel

Shopping Online

Medicine & Treatment

Education & Reference

Eating & Drinking

Software & Networking

Sports & Adventure

Employment & Careers

Children

Family & Home

Automobiles

Recreation

Games & Play

Policies & Law

People & Communities

 
Site Home :> Privacy Policy :> ToS  
© 2006-2008 www.wellpick.com All Rights Reserved Worldwide.