Someone just posted they were executor of mom's estate and how much work that entailed, there are five siblings. It occurred to me that only children might benefit from my mom's experience.
Mom wanted to leave everything to me, her only child. Every passbook, CD, etc., was held in a trust account with mom as the primary beneficiary and me as the contingent. All of her money was held this way in probably eight different banks.
Every bank allows funds to be held this way. No probate. No attorneys. No nothing. When mom passed, I simply took her death certificate with me and claimed the money. "I'd like to open an account where I'm the primary beneficiary and my only is the contingent beneficiary." That's all it takes.
One could do this if one has only one child or several. Very simple.
Mom's home would have been more work, but her live-in partner of 50 years bought it after I had it conservatively appraised, fixed every little problem in it, and bought him a home warranty for three years.
I'm not an attorney. This is not legal advice. Just relating our experience. Hope some find it helpful.
As the bank we dealt with only had branches in cities I transferred all assets to a different bank in a nearby village in my name alone as by that time she was totally incapable of making decisions or signing anything, only leaving her personal bank account open to receive her pension and SS. I'd done her banking (executor of her Will, done 10 years ago, and POA) for years and withdrew cash monthly to go towards paying for her NH care.
She passed away a couple of months ago. I cleared her room, which after 3 years was packed with stuff, figured out what to keep, donate or dispose of and attended to all necessary government paperwork. I have paid the funeral home bill and bequests and scattered her ashes as she wished. I have a refund cheque from the NH made payable to "the estate of .." and once the government death benefit cheque arrives, which will be payable in the same manner I can attend at her bank and wind things up.
Thankfully, due to everything being put in place many years ago when my mother was of sound mine, things went as smoothly as they could in the circumstances.
And the question of screwed up sibs....Maybe we should appreciate the fact that as only kids we can do it our way with out calling international conferences over the latest UTI. I really don't know anymore. My sibs could never take care of their own lives much less help with our parents.
But having said all that, Google God, would it be nice to have a sib, aunt, uncle, ANYONE down home to give me some help and keep an eye on things.
I had put together a large red 3-ring binder [easy to find among the dozens of my Dad's black 3-ring binders] with a whole slue of financial questions for Dad to answer like where are all his stocks.
For years I had been suggesting to Dad to have all those stocks with one broker.... Dad had a habit of buying stocks directly from the companies to save on broker fees... [sighs].... so I don't know if he has paper copies of stocks he bought in the 1940's and 1950's, and if so where are they.... safe deposit box?.... buried in the back yard?.....or became mice nesting material in an attic?
Windy, I did the same thing with my parents, got them to update their Power of Attorneys, Living Wills, and whatever else they needed while they were still able to understand what was going on.... whew, that was close. How I wished they would have done a Trust, but it's been almost a year and Dad still hasn't finished up the paperwork :P
After freaking out for a while I got busy. Dad was already in mild dementia and Mom was diabetic with too many other health issues to list. My sis died of a drug overdose at 42 leaving 2 small boys. Dad began running all over the place, moving funds, buying crappy annuities, hiding stuff in safe deposit boxes, and generally making a huge mess.
Due to the shock of my sisters death and her bad health Mom had become an invalid but told me Dad was doing some weird stuff with finances. After freaking out again, I was able to convince them to give me POA, update their wills and draw up living wills. I then spent 2 weeks tracking down all the finances, making copies of EVERYTHING while nursing Mom and trying to keep Dad on the leash.
My brother died suddenly 2 years later. By this time Dads dementia had progressed to where it would have been impossible to get any cooperation from him on any legal or financial matters. So thank god I did all that stuff in the past cause now I'm all there is. To be honest, given my sibs screwed up lives I've always been "All there is".
Sorry for rambling here but the post caught my eye. I've posted lots of this info before in other discussions including long distance caregiving threads. But I would be interested to hear from others who are the Only Child (sounds odd at age 60)
I would also note that it can be a lot to shoulder as the sole caregiver, but so many people deal with worthless sibs who just make things more difficult. So I guess in some respects, us only kids have it good.