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My stepmother remarried after my father died. How can I claim my inheritance?

“My father and stepmother built a successful business together and had decent-sized investments in stocks and bonds.” (Photo subject is a model.) – Getty Images/iStockphoto

I have a question about our rights to an estate once my stepmother passes away.

Here is some history: My father was married to my stepmother for 30 years. She acted as a mother to me growing up and we had a reasonably good relationship. My father and stepmother built a successful business together and had decent-sized investments in stocks and bonds, and their home.

My father had set up his assets like their home, etc, as a “tenancy in entirety” in the state of Florida. However, he and my stepmother also had an irrevocable martial trust in which, as I understand it. My father and stepmother had a child together (my sister), but she passed away about 16 years ago. Only my brother and I are survivors as named inheritors within the marital trust.

My stepmother remarried. She now has no interest in giving my brother and me anything. Her intention is to bequeath her properties and investments to her current new husband and her nieces and nephews on her side of the family.

Will his marital irrevocable trust have any protection for me and my siblings so we have rights to the assets once she passes away, or does she have the right to re-direct the assets to unnamed individuals outside of the marital trust?

Stepchild

Related: ‘She is very manipulative and controlling’: My mother offered to buy me an apartment, but there are strings. Is it foolish to say no?

Marital trusts are especially important for blended families so each spouse ensures that their respective children are taken care of in the event that one of them dies.
Marital trusts are especially important for blended families so each spouse ensures that their respective children are taken care of in the event that one of them dies. – MarketWatch illustration

The clue is in the question.

The trust is irrevocable. It’s not subject to change, especially upon the whims of one of the beneficiaries. Assuming your father set up this trust to benefit his spouse in addition to his two sons, there are three beneficiaries rather than one. A trust has a grantor (your father), the trustee (appointed by your father; it could be a family member, lawyer or financial adviser) and the beneficiary or beneficiaries. The trustee ensures that the beneficiaries abide by the rules.

Marital trusts are especially important for blended families so each spouse ensures that their respective children are taken care of if one of them dies. A stepmother or stepfather may promise their spouse and stepchildren the world while both parties are living but, as the pages of this column can attest, they can have a swift U-turn upon the death of their spouse. Your stepmother appears to have experienced one such change of heart.


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