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My Father died and my stepmother won't talk to me.? |
My father was sick for years with Alzheimer鈥檚. I believe he had a will, but I don't know how to get a copy of it. He told me he was going to leave his stocks to me. The probate court has no record of his estate yet. Legally, if you are in the will they lawyers will send you a copy ( at least here in Canada). These things take time, and if you are mentioned you will get your share. My grandfather's estate took almost 2 years to be finalized before his 6 children were to receive their share of what was left after the house sold, the bonds and investments matured, etc. While your father's wife will most likely have first dibs on his estate, if he had a will then the terms of that will must be honored. Wills are in the public record and must be run through Probate Court. Your stepmother cannot take possession of anything that was solely in your father's name until then. However, if various accounts (including the ones holding his investments) were in joint title then she can drag her feet because she already has access to them. If you know who the lawyer was who drew up the will, you can ask him or her if s/he has a copy. That may not help if there is evidence he destroyed his will, or if the will was signed before he married your stepmother (marriage voids a prior will). My deepest sympathy. Even though he had Alzheimer's your father's passing must have been a shock. If I was you I would hirer an attorney to handle what you believe is your in your dad's will if your stepmother is not coperating. You have every right to get what he left for you. Let the attorney do all the investigations this will lessen the drama between you and your stepmother. Good luck to you and Godbless sorry for your loss! Contrary to what many said here, many wills DO NOT have to be run through probate. My estate is set up so it will not go thru probate. You have to figure out who his lawyer was. If you can't do anything else, get your own lawyer, and subpoena his records. The lawyer will know what to do. The beauty of step parents, but as others have posted best bet is to retain legal representation, but without knowing all the facts, esp. how long they have been together you maybe shocked to find everything in the end was left to the step mother, unfortunate but a very common happening if he had a lawyer or accountant, that would be a place to start. Otherwise if the executor of the will did their job, they had to file with the court to probate the will..../ hmm... I cant say much but maybe you should start calling a lawyer??? Call the courts and ask them if he had a will. They should know. ur question has nothing to do with ur additional details. |
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