There are 3 ways one can pass on his wealth to
someone – joint accounts, nominations and Will. A lot of people do not know
which one is more powerful than other and when to use which one. Today lets
discuss few points about joint accounts, nominations and will and some
scenarios which will make them clear. Also below is a good video on Wills in
case you want to watch.
3 mistakes which investors make
1. Not understanding what a joint account
means
If you want to make sure that after your death,
your wife operates the account and should be the sole owner of the account then
don’t just make her the nominee, better make her a joint account holder in
the bank account itself. If you choose “either or survivor” mode, she will be
able to transact and do things along with you. But if you want to make sure
that she can only operate and take charge once you are not around, then choose
“former or survivor” mode, so she will not be able to transact and own anything
till you are alive, but once you are no more, she just becomes the owner,
without any hassles. This is a better way to give control to someone after your
death and more powerful and simple than making a WILL or leaving it on the
mercy of fate. You can make some person joint holder in bank accounts, mutual
funds, FD’s or real estate properties.
2. Forgetting about old joint holders
A lot of people have joint accounts with their
father, mother, brother etc etc years back, but now they want to pass on their
wealth to their children/wife on their death, so they put their names in
Nominee and also write a WILL (for full proof documentation), but
once they die, the nomination and WILL be of no use, because the bank account
is not dormant, it’s still alive with a legitimate owner and that will be the
person who was the joint owner. You might have opened that bank account long
back before marriage with your brother or father as joint holder and now forgot
about this, but they are next legitimate owner of the bank account (or anything
else). Note that nominations are useful to pass on the control only when no one
is to claim it and WILL are to transfer the rights to someone after the owner
is dead, but incase a joint account is there, the control can be passed only on
the death of both the holders , not just the primary or secondary holder.
3. Not changing Old nominations and WILL
A lot of people do not change the nominations of
their bank accounts, mutual funds, life insurance policies due to lazyness,
someone else is on the nominee list, but they want to transfer the asset to
some one else. A lot of people think that making a WILL is the final solution,
but in real life, there can be complications. What if nominee and the person mentioned
in a WILL are different ? The nominee can take out the cash from bank or do
some transaction ? Then the legal owner will have to run from pillers to post
to claim that money back and do all the legal work . See this classic issue on
forgetting about the WILL
Hi , I am facing a big issue .. My husband had written a WILL long back
stating that all the wealth should go to his brother after his death, but this
happened years back, when we were having a lot of issues in marriage and
fights, but after that everything was fine and things were on track. But seems
like my husband never wrote another WILL after that and didnt change the WILL.
He died recently in an accident and now his brother has claimed all our
property and bank balance because of that WILL . What can I do ?
Truely speaking , This lady cant do anything … her
husband was ignorant about these things and now she will pay for his mistakes !
Some best practices
·
If you are 100% sure that your wealth should go to
some specific person, always have a joint account with that person with you as
primary person.
·
Make sure your nominee should be the same person
you want to pass on some policy proceeds or property, It does not make sense to
say in WILL that your wealth should go to A , but in nominee the name mentioned
is B .
·
If you have opened any accounts/properties/mutual
funds/policies long back , its a good idea to revisit it and see that the
nominee name is appearing and is consistent with what you want it to be .
Joint Accounts, Nomination and Wills are all ways
to pass on your wealth to someone else once you die, so it is very important
that you structure these in the best possible manner. Have consistency in all
these 3 things. If you pass on your money to a person better open account or
buy the asset along as joint owner, make sure you put his name as nominee and
also make sure that the WILL is written with clear directions.
Source
: www.jagoinvestor.com
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