April 30, 2014. In first marriages, the couple generally has the same goals when it comes to their estate planning: take care of the surviving spouse for as long as he or she lives, then whatever is left will go to the children. They may own many of their assets jointly and, at the death of the first spouse, more than likely everything will go to the surviving spouse just as they had planned.
But second marriages (after divorce or death of the first spouse) are different. There may be his children, her children and sometimes their children. Each spouse probably has assets they brought into this marriage, and they will want those to go to their own children after they die. At the same time, they will probably want to make sure the surviving spouse will have enough to live on.
More than likely, estate planning methods relied upon in the first marriage will not work now. For example, let’s say the husband adds the new wife’s name on the title of his home and they own it as joint tenants with right of survivorship. If he dies first, his share will immediately transfer to his wife, who now has complete ownership of his home. She can do whatever she wants with it now, regardless of what his Will or Trust says. She can leave it to her own children and completely disinherit his.
There are similar problems with beneficiary designations. Many people name their spouse as beneficiary of their life insurance, IRAs and other tax-deferred plans to provide for their spouse should they die first. But this can be a problem with second marriages because the spouse-beneficiary can name anyone he/she wants as new beneficiaries or to inherit the proceeds, bypassing the owner’s children. Promises may be made now to include them, but promises can be broken after one spouse is gone.
Other Considerations:
Most people will want to do the right thing for everyone involved: themselves, their spouse, their children, and their spouse’s children. An estate planning attorney will help take the time to consider this from everyone’s point of view.
For more information on estate planning for second marriages, contact the Goosmann Trust Law Counsel at info@goosmannlaw.com or call 712-226-4000.
Follow Breandan Donahue and Christie Finnegan on Twitter @BreandanAtGLF and @ChristieAtGLF!