LIFE INSURANCE FUNDAMENTALS:Imagine What Could Happen Without A Current Will?Your Province Has A Will For You and It Is Not What You Want ! Do you have a valid will is the first question I ask in my Financial Planning Process as protection of the family is one of the primary functions of a good financial plan. Unfortunately, I have found that less than 50% of the clients I see a have one that is current and reflects what they want to have happen. None of them realize that if they choose not to take the time and money to make out their own Last Will and Testament, the Government of British Columbia (used as an example for the purpose of this article) will do it for them. These are some of the things that could happen if the husband dies under the will imposed by the Province:
An interesting question arises if the wife does not have the share of the estate for the children at age 18. What if a large portion of the estate is in the family home. The child could bring action to get the mother to sell the home in an extreme situation. If the deceased is part of a partnership, the partnership is immediately disolved and the deceased estate is owed half the value of the business. How will that money be raised? Will the surviving partner be able to continue the business after paying out half the value to the estate? If the deceased is a shareholder in a small firm - what provisions have been made to purchase the shares back from the estate? Do the remaining shareholders want the estate as a shareholder with the power to dictate decisions? These are some of the issues that are addressed in Buy/Sell
Agreements which are essentially Business Wills and are equally
important to the financial security of the Business Owners
family. |



