A well-drafted estate plan can do a remarkable amount of work. It can direct real estate, retirement accounts, business interests, and financial assets with precision and legal clarity. But walk into the home of someone who has just passed and look around the room. You will quickly find the edges of what most estate plans actually cover.
The car in the driveway. The jewelry box on the dresser. The coin collection in the closet. The china that has been in the family for three generations. These are the items that siblings stand over and disagree about, and they are also the items most likely to be handled with a general clause or not addressed at all.
As an LA County estate planning attorney, I see this play out regularly, even in families with solid, up-to-date plans.
What Does an Estate Plan Usually Say About Personal Property?
Most wills and trusts include what is called a general personal property clause. It might say something along the lines of “all remaining personal property to be divided equally among my children.” That language is legally valid, but it is not specific. And in the absence of specifics, it leaves a great deal of room for disagreement.
When three children each remember a different conversation about who was getting Mom’s rings, a general clause does not resolve that. It simply puts the executor in the middle of it.
What Options Exist for Handling This More Clearly?
One of the most practical tools available is a personal property memorandum. Many states allow you to create a separate signed document that lists specific items and names who should receive them. The significant advantage of this approach is that you can update the list without amending your will or trust, which makes it easier to keep current as your belongings and your relationships evolve.
For items of particular value, whether financial or sentimental, a specific bequest written directly into the will or trust is the clearest approach. If the diamond ring is going to your youngest daughter, say so by name, and say it in the document.
What About Items That Are Titled, Like a Vehicle?
A car is not quite the same as a piece of furniture, because vehicles carry a title. They transfer differently than untitled personal property and may need to pass through the estate or be transferred by a separate transfer-on-death designation, depending on how ownership is documented. Families are often surprised to find that the car requires its own process, separate from everything else.
What Happens When Nothing Is Specified?
When personal property is not addressed, and family members cannot agree, the executor has the authority to make distribution decisions or, in some cases, liquidate items and divide the proceeds. That outcome rarely feels right to anyone who had a sentimental attachment to those belongings.
The items that matter most to your family are worth naming. A quick conversation with your LA County estate planning attorney about a personal property memorandum or specific bequests can spare your loved ones a significant amount of conflict at an already difficult time.
If you would like to review how personal property is handled in your current plan, or if you are starting from scratch, we invite you to reach out and schedule a consultation with our office.