Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Terminally Ill Isolated Family Member Changes a Will

Hi. I’m Reed Bloodworth a business litigation estate and trust litigation attorney in Orlando Florida. Today I wanted to discuss some common scenarios in trust and estate litigation where it may be in your best interest to contact a trust and estate litigation attorney.

Terminally Ill Isolated Family Member Changes a Will 

These scenarios consist of situations where a terminally ill isolated family member changes a will or trust has been changed and the person who was changing the will or trust suffered from potentially some type of health issue or had been isolated from their family.

Dementia or Alzheimer's Some of these common scenarios are the person making the trust or the will had dementia or Alzheimer’s. Another common one is the person was in very poor health or was heavily medicated potentially on their death bed.

Isolated Person Changes Will or Trust

Another common scenario is when the person changing the will or the trust has been completely isolated from the rest of their family by someone else.

These types of situations are situations where wills or trusts are changed under very suspicious circumstances. For example if someone has dementia or they have Alzheimer’s or they are heavily medicated due to a severe medical condition or perhaps they’re in hospice just because they’re very elderly these are all situations where the person making the change to the will or trust may not have had the mental capacity to make those changes.

When Elderly Person is Kept Isolated

The situation where the person changing the will or trust is you know isolated from their family this is a sadly a common scenario where an elderly person is not allowed to speak with potentially their sons or daughters or other family members and they are kept isolated from those people who were beneficiaries under a prior will or trust and are surprised at the time of death or sometime after the person dies to find out that they are no longer beneficiaries that the person who had isolated them is now the sole recipient of all of that person’s estate.

Undue Influence=Control Over Person Making Change

These types of situations give rise to various claims. Some common ones are undue influence. Undue influence is a situation where the person who had the will changed for their benefit had a control over the person that was making the change. They may have had a high degree of difference in their mental abilities which harkens back to the various medical conditions we talked about or they simply could’ve isolated this person they could have berated them harassed them done a number of things to make them change their will or trust to name the new beneficiary the sole beneficiary of the will or trust.

Making Changes with Alzheimer's or Severe Dementia, or Heavy Medication

The other very common cause of action in this situation is lack of capacity. When someone has Alzheimer’s they have severe dementia they are heavily medicated because they’re dying of cancer or they’re very elderly and they’re in hospice care these people typically do not have the mental capacity to understand what it is they’re doing when they change a will or they change a trust.

The law requires a person to have the mental capacity to understand what it is they’re doing at the time they execute a will or trust. If they don’t that will or trust can be challenged in court and can be voided so that the proper beneficiaries receive what they should have to begin with.

These are just some common scenarios and they’re scenarios that if you experience this it would likely be in your interest to contact a trust and estate litigation attorney.

So again my name is Reed Bloodworth an attorney in Orlando Florida. Give me a call. Let’s talk about what happened to you.