There was a gentleman named “John” who walked into
my office letting me know that his cousin’s condo needed to be sold. His cousin, “Jane”, died the previous year
and her condo was just sitting there empty.
Jane had no surviving spouse, children, parents or siblings. John was a cousin on the maternal side of
Jane’s family, and he only knew the names of eight family members on the
maternal side. So we opened a probate
estate which was based on the laws of intestacy since Jane did not have any
estate planning documents such as a Will or Living Trust.
The intestacy laws are basically everybody’s
“default will” if they do not write down their own wishes. In Illinois, it states that if you die with a
surviving spouse and children, then half goes to spouse, half goes to
children. If you die with only a spouse
or only children, then all of your estate will go to such party or
parties. If you die with neither, then
it goes to your siblings and parents, in equal shares, and possibly to nieces
and nephews if a sibling has predeceased you.
If you do not have any of those surviving family members, then we have
to reach up to the maternal and paternal grandparents’ sides, and create a
large family tree to figure out who is below, and to figure out the correct
labels of these individuals such as “cousins twice removed.”
In Jane’s situation, we had to do the latter. Within a week of filing the Petition in
court, we received letters from two different attorneys, one representing the
relatives under the paternal grandparents’ side which was about 30 additional
beneficiaries, and the other attorney representing other relatives (who John
did not know) from the maternal grandparents’ side which was an additional 25
beneficiaries. So the grand total of
potential beneficiaries “sticking out their hand” for the inheritance from Jane
was about 63 people.
The condo was the only asset in the estate. It sold for about $230,000. In the end, everyone received a piece of the
pie (or more like a sliver) and it took over five years to complete.
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