Foreign Estates

A client recently came to our office with the following situation. The client’s mother had passed away owning a house in Mississippi plus a house, other land and mineral interests in another state. Though the woman was a native of Mississippi, most of her life was spent in the other state. She also left a Will leaving her estate to her husband and if husband predeceased, then to a daughter. The Will, however, was never signed and therefore is invalid.
Without a Will, her estate must be administered in the county where she lived at the time of her death. Her assets must be inventoried, creditors notified through publication in a newspaper and in letters to the creditors, and heirs at law must be determined by publishing a Notice to Unknown Heirs in the newspaper and then, at a hearing, the Court must rule who her heirs at law are. In this case, there is only one child. However, this does not end the problem. A similar administration must be filed in all other states where real property or mineral interests are owned. Although there are differences in each state’s laws, estate laws are somewhat similar and the same matters must be attended to according to the laws of the other state.
If the deceased had the foresight to create, fund and administer a Revocable Living Trust, the dual expense, months delay and long-distance administration would have been avoided. The Trust could be created in any state where the Grantor owned real property. The Trust would then be funded by transferring (deeding) the ownership of all real property and mineral interests to the Trust once and for all. The cost to administer estates in two states is at least four or five times the cost of creating a Trust and transferring property in each state.
Whether property is owned in just Mississippi, whether single
or multiple tracts, or in several states, a wise consideration is to create a
Revocable Living Trust and save your beneficiaries much delay, frustration, and
money.









