Lessons to be Learned from Anna Nicole
On July 31, 2001, Anna Nicole Smith signed a Will leaving all of her estate
to her son, Daniel, to be held in trust with her friend, Howard K. Stern, as
Trustee. Unfortunately, Daniel died on September 10, 2006, at age 20. A few
days prior to Daniel’s death, Anna Nicole gave birth to a daughter, Danielynn,
on September 7, 2006. Later that month, Anna Nicole and Howard K. Stern had
a commitment ceremony on a yacht in the waters off Nassau, Bahamas.
So, by late-September, there had been significant changes to Anna Nicole’s
circumstances. Yet, Anna Nicole did not change her Will. She did not change
it to leave anything to either her new daughter, Danielynn, or to Danielynn’s
putative father and Anna Nicole’s new domestic partner, Howard K. Stern.
She did not change her Will to provide for a guardian for Danielynn.
Anna Nicole died on February 8, 2007. She seems not to have learned from the
mess in which she was involved over the estate of J. Howard Marshall. Not only
did she fail to revise her estate plan after major changes in her life, but
she included provisions in her Will that overrode state laws that would have
presumed she wanted to include children born after the Will was written. The
laws of California (which govern her Will) provide that children born after
a Will is written are presumed to have been meant to be included unless you
specifically say in the Will that you do not want to include future children.
Anna Nicole specifically included such a provision in her Will. Further, she
appointed Howard K. Stern as guardian for Daniel. But, she did not specify that
he was also to be guardian for any other children she may have.
Anna Nicole made yet another mistake. She used a Will to dispose of her property.
This made her affairs a public matter. She could have avoided some of the scrutiny
over her affairs if she had used a Revocable Living Trust to hold and dispose
of her assets.
Do not make the same mistakes that Anna Nicole made. Review your estate planning
documents periodically and upon any significant change in your life: the birth
or death of a family member; marriage or divorce; significant increase or decrease
in your assets; etc. Further, allow your estate plan to be flexible enough to
anticipate changes which may happen before you can change your plan. A qualified
estate planning attorney can help you create a plan that can anticipate many
changes in your life, and can review the plan with you at regular intervals.
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