Practical, real-world information about wills, estates, inheritance, executors, and elder law in Canada
Monday, September 11, 2017
How to handle a belligerent beneficiary
Posted by
Lynne Butler, BA LLB
One of the regular readers of this blog (I'm looking at you, webeye) suggested the following article to me. Though the article is American, the ideas in it translate into our system pretty well. In it, the author talks about demanding beneficiaries becoming belligerent beneficiaries, and how he handled it when it happened to him. Let's face it; not all beneficiaries are rays of sunshine! Click here to read the story from www.thecommonexecutor.com. Keep in mind as you read it that the author isn't a lawyer, but someone who has been through the experience of being an executor.
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Daniel,
ReplyDeleteI'm not understanding how you claim you and your siblings are beneficiaries to your father's pension, when you later say he chose someone else as the pension's beneficiary.
Although you and your siblings maybe the beneficiaries to his estate as per his will, a plan which permits naming a separate beneficiary such as a life insurance policy or RRSP, are not included within the estate unless the estate is the beneficiary named.
Hi Daniel,
ReplyDeleteThe company won't change your father's choice of beneficiary once that choice has been made known and accepted by the company. Keep in mind, though, that pensions are regulated by laws and by company policies.
If your father was legally married and not divorced from the lady in Guatelmala, she is still the beneficiary because she is still the legal wife. The company didn't change that. It would have been that way when he was married and never revised.
Either he didn't tell them he was living common law, or they didn't accept a common law as having the same status as a legal wife. And yes, they are allowed to set those rules.
Even if your mother was the beneficiary, that doesn't mean that you are now the beneficiaries.
Lynne