If the assets were held in a Trust, and the Trust language states that all assets pass to the step-parent after your parent dies, then you have to bring a Trust contest lawsuit. And your trust contest must be based on either lack of capacity or undue influence.
How did my father and stepmother’s joint trust work?
Or: “Our father and stepmother had a joint trust leaving everything to all of their children — my siblings and my step-siblings — when the second one of them died. After my father’s death, my stepmother changed the trust to go only to her children.
Can a marital trust be transferred to a surviving spouse?
A marital trust is a type of irrevocable trust that allows you to transfer assets to a surviving spouse tax free. It can also shield the estate of the surviving spouse before the remaining assets pass on to your children.
What happens to my father’s assets if he dies?
If your father has passed away, you are probably entitled to receive a share of their assets. What this share consists of depends on various factors including the decedent’s wishes, whether your father left behind a surviving spouse, and whether you have siblings.
What happens to property when a parent dies?
When a parent dies, property is distributed according to the wishes of the deceased if she left a will, or based on the laws and practices that govern such transfers in that particular state. Whether or not you’d get property in your name upon the death of a parent depends on the will.
Can a living trust be used to transfer real estate?
the deceased person used a living trust (as opposed to a will) to leave the real estate to someone the deceased person completed and filed a transfer-on-death deed, allowed in more than half of states, to designate someone to receive the property after death, or the deceased person co-owned the real estate in one of a few ways.
Can a mother be the beneficiary of a trust?
In your scenario therefore, it’s not quite right to say that your father’s will left everything to your mother, as his share of the property has been carved out into a trust where your mother is a beneficiary of the property during her lifetime, but she is not the legal owner of it.