Hello all,
My first post and I'll be honest, I'd really rather not be posting this.
We are about halfway through the will process following the death of my wife's mother. I'm a named beneficiary in the will, as is my wife.
Her brother is the sole executor. He is now not communicating at all with his sister, apart from through a Solicitor. The house was put on the market, a price £30k lower than the asking price was agreed and it is sold subject to contract, all without consulting or informing any of the beneficiaries. In fact, the neighbour was told, but not the beneficiaries.
We are about to go to the house to sort out the remainder of the belongings, and her brother now is insisting on making all the arrangements via the solicitor, and is now instructing a house clearance company to supervise us while we sort the belongings. The reason he is giving is to "protect his position as executor" . We are only allowed to attend the house for 4 hours and cannot stay there, despite the fact we live 200 miles away, and prior to her death, we visited the my wife's mother at the house regularly for 30 years. To add more context, we lived in the house and cared for her mother for the 10 days up to her death, and were by her side when she passed away.
My concern is that my wife's brother (the executor) is now using the estate to fund his animosity to my wife, amassing legal fees by insisting any communication goes through the solicitor rather than face to face with him. Again, more context, we have behaved calmly and properly throughout, no heated arguments etc. All of the remaining arrangements could be sorted by some discussion, but now we are having to pay for a solicitor at £275+ vat per hour for the simplest of questions.
Do we have any options to stop his over-use of the solicitor without having to go to one ourselves? or does he basically have carte blanche to use a solicitor as he wants? It feels as if we are powerless, as the more we correspond with his solicitor for matters that can be resolved by a quick phone call, the more it costs the estate, i.e. our inheritance.
On a related matter, two items of modest value (about £200) have not been accounted for in the list of assets. We suspect he has these. What can we do if he has taken them and not declared them as part of the estate?
thanks for any advice on offer.
My first post and I'll be honest, I'd really rather not be posting this.
We are about halfway through the will process following the death of my wife's mother. I'm a named beneficiary in the will, as is my wife.
Her brother is the sole executor. He is now not communicating at all with his sister, apart from through a Solicitor. The house was put on the market, a price £30k lower than the asking price was agreed and it is sold subject to contract, all without consulting or informing any of the beneficiaries. In fact, the neighbour was told, but not the beneficiaries.
We are about to go to the house to sort out the remainder of the belongings, and her brother now is insisting on making all the arrangements via the solicitor, and is now instructing a house clearance company to supervise us while we sort the belongings. The reason he is giving is to "protect his position as executor" . We are only allowed to attend the house for 4 hours and cannot stay there, despite the fact we live 200 miles away, and prior to her death, we visited the my wife's mother at the house regularly for 30 years. To add more context, we lived in the house and cared for her mother for the 10 days up to her death, and were by her side when she passed away.
My concern is that my wife's brother (the executor) is now using the estate to fund his animosity to my wife, amassing legal fees by insisting any communication goes through the solicitor rather than face to face with him. Again, more context, we have behaved calmly and properly throughout, no heated arguments etc. All of the remaining arrangements could be sorted by some discussion, but now we are having to pay for a solicitor at £275+ vat per hour for the simplest of questions.
Do we have any options to stop his over-use of the solicitor without having to go to one ourselves? or does he basically have carte blanche to use a solicitor as he wants? It feels as if we are powerless, as the more we correspond with his solicitor for matters that can be resolved by a quick phone call, the more it costs the estate, i.e. our inheritance.
On a related matter, two items of modest value (about £200) have not been accounted for in the list of assets. We suspect he has these. What can we do if he has taken them and not declared them as part of the estate?
thanks for any advice on offer.
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