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Aretha Franklin’s estate battle shows importance of having proper will

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Aretha Franklin performs onstage in New York City, Nov. 7, 2017.

Dimitrios Kambouris | Getty Images Entertainment | Getty Images

It’s unclear which of Aretha Franklin’s wills is valid

Key steps you need to establish an estate plan

Franklin, who died at age 76, had four sons. The current legal dispute is between her sons, who disagree over which handwritten will should govern their mother’s estate. Their jury trial started Monday.  

One son, Ted White II, thinks the 2010 will should control the estate, while two other sons, Kecalf Franklin and Edward Franklin, favor the 2014 document, according to the Associated Press.

There are differences between the documents. For instance, the 2014 version says Kecalf Franklin and grandchildren would get his mother’s main home in Bloomfield Hills, valued at $1.1 million when she died, according to the AP. However, the 2010 version splits the home evenly between White and Kecalf Franklin.

Both wills seem to indicate the sons would share income from music and copyrights.

Everybody should have either a will or a trust. [Otherwise] state law will dictate where your property goes.

Richard Behrendt

Estate planner

Certain states such as Michigan recognize handwritten wills — also known as holographic wills — as valid if they meet specific criteria, said Charlie Douglas, a certified financial planner and president of HH Legacy Investments in Atlanta.

Generally, the more recent will takes precedence over an older one, Douglas said. If a jury determines Franklin’s 2014 will, which was found in a notebook under a couch cushion, as valid, it would supersede the 2010 document, found in a locked cabinet.

“There are too many ways it could go wrong,” Behrendt said of drafting a do-it-yourself will. “This [proceeding] will be talked about in law schools in every state in the country.

“This is why you don’t want to do it on a note pad,” he added.

Even a proper will is superseded in some cases

A will is superseded in some cases, such as with beneficiary designations on retirement accounts, Douglas said.

That may also happen if a decedent owns property in “joint tenancy,” whereby two or more people own the property together, Douglas said. Let’s say a married couple owns an investment account in joint tenancy. This legal arrangement dictates that the surviving spouse inherits the account, taking precedence over the language in a will, Douglas said.

“You have to also look at how your assets are titled,” Douglas said. “Because the will may or may not control [them].”

When someone dies, the executor presents their will to the court as part of a “probate” proceeding. The will and its contents become a matter of public record, Behrendt said.

People who would like to keep the details of their estate plan private — especially celebrities and those with wealth — may prefer to use a trust instead, Behrendt said. Using a revocable trust is essentially the same as a will, but it allows you circumvent the courts, he said.

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