Probate Without Money

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legal information on going through probate without money


That was a search hit I got.

The problem with this question is that you can't go through probate without money. The deceased's creditors want cash. The probate court wants cash. Attorneys and anybody else your executor has to hire want cash. Federal Estate tax may be on the way out, but while it's still here, that final tax form and the cash are due nine months after death. State estate tax is still here in most states, nor is it likely to go away, and the state wants cash, not promissory notes.

Your estate is going to have to get this money from somewhere, and I'll enumerate the classical alternatives, assuming that the point is not moot. If you die owing more than you have, settling your estate becomes a matter of purely academic interest, because your heirs aren't getting anything substantial.

Most obvious is to pay for it with money on hand, already in the estate. If you could afford this, you wouldn't have been running that search.

Also obvious is to have the executor (or other heir) loan the money out of their own pocket. This sometimes happens in the case of someone who's inheriting a house or other major assets. Sometimes executors take out short term loans for this purpose, also. Be careful - one thing most state laws require is that when you pay a debt for an estate, you must get written proof that you paid it out of your own funds for the settlement of the debts of the estate. On the other hand, if you could do this you probably wouldn't be running this search.

The next option is sale of assets to pay the debts, taxes, and anything else. This happens disturbingly often, mostly as a result of people who persist in believing that they're going to live forever. The notable drawbacks of this are two. The minor one is that maybe your heirs didn't want to sell, and the major one is that they're not likely to get anything like full price in such a situation. When you have to sell, the ones with the cash drive fire sale-like bargains. Also, the executor has to have the court approve this, which costs money in and of itself.

The next option is to do nothing. If this is what your heirs opt for, the vast majority of the time the court will order any assets there may be sold in order to pay the existing creditors and new assessments caused by your death. Your heirs are likely to get even less money here than the previous paragraph, and the court itself certainly won't cost any less.

The final option, and likely the best one, is to do what folks who plan ahead do, and have a policy of life insurance in effect. This is one of the reasons why Variable Life, and particularly Variable Universal Life Insurance, beats term life insurance like a red-headed stepchild when you consider the lifelong implications. The proceeds are all leveraged, tax free money, coming to pay your estate's bills as soon as your executor sends the insurance company your notice of death. Unfortunately, at the time your heirs are running that search, it's too late for this option. Like most really wonderful financial windfalls, you've got to plan ahead to make this work for your heirs.

Caveat Emptor.




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This page contains a single entry by Dan Melson published on May 3, 2006 10:00 AM.

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