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Leaving the Farm to the Kids? A Story of One Family's Inheritance
Last year, we sold a farm that three brothers and three sisters
had originally inherited from their parents in 1968. In 1975,
one of the sisters died. She was a widow and her three children
(we knew of only two at the time of the sale) inherited her
1/6 share ownership of the farm. A second sister died in 1984.
At the time of her death, she was married and had two children
- a son and a mentally disabled daughter. In 1990, her husband
died leaving his entire estate (which he believed included
his wife's 1/6 interest in the farm) to the son who was caring
for his sister.
We
listed the property in June. By early August, a contract had
been signed and the closing was set for September 1st.
The
Title Company requested a copy of all divorce decrees from
the three sellers who had been divorced and remarried. One
of the decrees showed that an ex-wife had not signed the proper
documents at the time of the divorce. Legally, she had an
interest in her husband's inheritance.
After
a few tense days for the ex-husband, she signed a quit claim
deed that gave up any interest she might hav claimed to the
property. Next, the Title Company determined that one of the
dead sisters had three children and not two.
The
third child, his wife and family were in the Federal Witness
Protection Program. I began the search for him.
Two
weeks later with the help of an anonymous source, I found
him. He and his wife agreed they would sign the deed, but
the time and place would have to be determined later.
Then
a major problem surfaced! The Title Company discovered that
the second sister died without a will. This meant that her
husband inherited only one-half of his late wife's interest
in the farm and their two children had inherited the other
half.
The
intent of the parents had been for the son to receive 100%
of the mother's interest in the farm for taking care of his
mentally disabled sister. Now the brother learned that legally
he was entitled to only 50% of his mother's interest in the
farm. Since he was not his sister's legal guardian, the Court
would have to appoint a guardian to represent her in the sale
of her share of the farm. Furthermore, the brother would have
to go to Court against his sister's guardian to establish
who was to get the heir's share of the farm. An attorney was
appointed to act as a guardian for the sister.
The
Court ordered that the mother's interest in the farm be appraised
as of the date of her death in 1984. Because I had been selling
the land in the area since 1967, the Court accepted my apppraisal
of the property. Then, nothing seemed to happen.
Sixty
days had passed since the scheduled closing and no one seemed
to know when the Court would make a final decsion. The sellers
were becoming concerned. Suppose another heir died before
the sale was closed? Or, what if one of them became ill and
could not act on their own behalf? They wanted to close the
sale as quickly as possible.
I
offered a suggestion to the Title Comany and they agreed.
The Title Company would close the sale. All of the owners
would get their share and the Title Company would hold the
disputed 1/12 share in an escrow account. Once the Court made
a decision, the Title Company would pay the money to which
the Court designated. The sale closed in December - 90 days
after the scheduled closing. Three months later the Court
ruled that 1/2 of the mother's share of the farm (or 1/12
of the sale proceeds) would go to the brother as the parents
had wished.
But,
by this time it didn't matter to the brother. Here's why:
the 1/12 disputed share of the sale was $15,580. The Court
costs and legal fees amounted to $14,250.
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