When the rich and famous die – often under tragic circumstances – truly epic battles over the estates they leave behind frequently follow. Sadly, some of the best estate planning lessons can be learned from celebrity cautionary tales. Consider the following well-known estate planning mistakes and the lessons we should all take away from the battles that followed as a result of those mistakes.
Prince Rogers Nelson: The Importance of Having an Estate Plan
The famous singer known simply as “Prince” died at the relatively young age of 57 back in April of 2016. Along with being shocked at the “Purple Rain” singer’s death, people were also shocked that he had not executed even a basic Last Will and Testament prior to his death. Now a Minnesota judge is deciding how to distribute Prince’s estimated $300 million estate among six siblings. Other potential heirs have surfaced, too, including a federal inmate claiming to be Prince’s son. When someone dies without so much as a basic Will in place, the state intestate succession laws dictate how the estate is distributed. Prince may, or may not, have wanted his siblings to share his estate equally. Executing a Will would have ensured that his wishes were honored.
Michael Jackson: Funding a Trust Immediately after Its Creation
Michael Jackson’s death in June 2009 touched off a string of ongoing court battles over his estate, now worth $600 million. Among Jackson’s biggest estate planning mistakes was creating a trust but failing to fund it. Absent a properly funded trust, Jackson’s beneficiaries have wound up numerous times in probate court, the estate is still open, and all things concerning it are subject to court approval. A simple Pour-Over Will, which “pours” over all estate assets into a trust at the time of death, could have prevented this disaster.
James Gandolfini: Incomplete Planning Can Lead to a Huge Estate Tax Bill
The Sopranos actor James Gandolfini was reportedly worth $70 million when he died in June 2013 of a heart attack while on vacation in Rome. He executed a Will prior to leaving on his vacation that provided for his widow, daughter and two sisters; however, Gandolfini didn’t incorporate tax avoidance strategies and tools into a comprehensive estate plan. Consequently, the estate ended up paying federal and state estate taxes at a hefty rate of 55 percent. Gandolfini could have taken a little extra time and included some tax avoidance strategies with his Will that would have saved his estate, and consequently his loved ones, a considerable amount of money that went to Uncle Sam instead.
Whitney Houston: Failing to Update a Will Can Have Disastrous Consequences
Songstress Whitney Houston had a Will when she died in 2012, but it was executed a month before the 1993 birth of Houston’s only child, daughter Bobbi Kristina Brown. Houston never updated her Will. By the time of her death, her fortune had climbed to $20 million and her daughter, Bobbi Kristina, was 18 years old. Under the terms of the old Will, Bobbi was to receive 10 percent of the estate – $2 million — when she turned 21 and the remainder at a later time. Unfortunately, failing to update her Will meant that Houston failed to consider whether her daughter was mature enough to handle millions of dollars at the young age of 20 years old. Sadly, Bobbi Kristina got the $2 million but never received the rest of her inheritance because she died in 2015, also as a result of drowning and drug intoxication. Had Houston taken the time to update her estate plan, she could have created a trust to help protect and manage Bobbi’s inheritance.
Heath Ledger: The Birth of a Child Should Trigger an Update of Your Estate Plan
After actor Heath Ledger died in January 2008, reports surfaced that he had failed to update an old Will created before his daughter was born. As a result, Ledger’s entire $20 million estate went to his parents and three sisters. Fortunately for everyone involved, relatives revealed in late 2008 that all of Ledger’s money would go where he would have wanted — to daughter Matilda Ledger, whose mom is actress Michelle Williams. His daughter, however, could have been left with nothing as the beneficiaries are not legally obligated to do anything for his daughter. A well drafted Will should always have language that references any natural born children, adopted or stepchildren, and any offspring you may have in the future. By including them even before they exist, you know they are accounted for from the moment they do exist.
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