MarkV
Super Member
- Joined
- Apr 7, 2000
- Messages
- 5,636
- Location
- Cedartown, Ga and N. Ga mountains
- Tractor
- 1998 Kubota B21, 2005 Kubota L39
Richard,
Just a point of clarification? This started with the idea of buying the AIL’s 1/9 ownership of the 250 acres. Is this something that has been brought up and her and her 4 heirs are interested in and agree to do? I ask because our experience with assisted living has been that you generally want to bankrupt someone in that situation so that Medicare will kick in and take care of the expenses. A large influx of new cash can be a problem if the land hasn’t already been deeded to the heirs.
As a “yankee” that married into an old southern family I have made several observations. First, though loved, respected and welcomed, twenty years later I’m still a “yankee” and never will be blood. Second, family land is an issue for blood and no one else. Third, old southern gentlemen do not make fast decisions and do not feel their finances are anyone else’s business.
As much as you are only trying to protect his interests is there a chance he perceives your efforts as ‘none of your business’? Sounds like you have taken him to an attorney at your expense, offered to pay legal fees for a trust, encouraged real-estate marketing inquires and are trying to buy out one of the family members. I think my mid 80’s FIL could have perceived that as pushing a little too hard. I don’t think he ever got over living through the depression where land was the only thing of value after the banks went bust. Maybe you need to back off and let the chips fall where they may even if it isn’t the way you would have handled it personally.
Of course every situation is different and I can only base on what I believe my FIL would have felt.
MarkV
Just a point of clarification? This started with the idea of buying the AIL’s 1/9 ownership of the 250 acres. Is this something that has been brought up and her and her 4 heirs are interested in and agree to do? I ask because our experience with assisted living has been that you generally want to bankrupt someone in that situation so that Medicare will kick in and take care of the expenses. A large influx of new cash can be a problem if the land hasn’t already been deeded to the heirs.
As a “yankee” that married into an old southern family I have made several observations. First, though loved, respected and welcomed, twenty years later I’m still a “yankee” and never will be blood. Second, family land is an issue for blood and no one else. Third, old southern gentlemen do not make fast decisions and do not feel their finances are anyone else’s business.
As much as you are only trying to protect his interests is there a chance he perceives your efforts as ‘none of your business’? Sounds like you have taken him to an attorney at your expense, offered to pay legal fees for a trust, encouraged real-estate marketing inquires and are trying to buy out one of the family members. I think my mid 80’s FIL could have perceived that as pushing a little too hard. I don’t think he ever got over living through the depression where land was the only thing of value after the banks went bust. Maybe you need to back off and let the chips fall where they may even if it isn’t the way you would have handled it personally.
Of course every situation is different and I can only base on what I believe my FIL would have felt.
MarkV