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Your home is likely one of the most valuable assets you own, if not the most valuable. Calling it an asset can sound cold. A home is far more than an assortment of materials and possessions. It is also a place to live, gather, create life stories, and share memories. However, in the eyes of the law, your home is a collection of several types of property along with their associated property rights. When the time comes to pass your home on at your death, the law, rather than any sentimental attachments or fond associations with the house, is what matters.
“Leaving my home to someone” can mean different things to different people—and to the law. The only way to ensure that your gift is received exactly as you envision it is to spell out the details in your will or trust. That process involves considering not only the property itself but also what is in it, what is attached to it, and what financial strings are tied to it.
It is common to use words and expressions in everyday conversation that carry a different meaning in legal terms.
Telling a friend that you are giving your old car to your nephew might suggest a simple handover of the keys, but legally it could require a complex transfer of title and registration, refinancing a loan, and payment of any resulting taxes. Taking care of a friend’s dog may imply feeding and walking it for the weekend. Depending on the situation and state law, however, agreeing to care for a dog may also mean taking on legal responsibility, such as being held liable if the dog bites someone.
Similarly, when we say “my home,” we usually mean the whole package: the house, the land it is on (including the front and backyards), and even the furniture and belongings inside. In legal terms, however, each of those elements is distinct and has its own rules for transfer, ownership, and inheritance.
So, while you may say in a will or trust that you are leaving “my home” to someone, the law does not automatically treat “home” as one indivisible object. Instead, it sees separate legal components that may or may not be included in your bequest, depending on the wording.
Generally, when you leave a house to someone in your estate plan, you are giving them what the law calls real property. But what is actually included in that term may not be obvious, which is why the wording in your will or trust matters. Being precise ensures that you transfer exactly what you want—no more, no less. Consider the following:
The house, the land, and everything permanently attached to the property are almost certainly included when you refer to “my home” in your estate plan. However, the following types of items in the home may not be part of the transfer unless you specifically include them:
Some people want all the personal property in the home to transfer with the home, while others would rather it go to someone else. For those who want to include it with the home, they may identify the gift in their estate plan as “the home and all its contents.” However, an all-contents clause is not a foolproof solution for avoiding ambiguity. Courts often narrowly interpret phrases such as “all its contents” or “everything in the house” to mean only household goods inside the home, not items stored off-site. For example, imagine that your will says you are leaving “my home and all its contents” to your daughter. She reasonably assumes that this means the furniture, dishes, and artwork inside the house. However, you also keep valuable jewelry in a safe deposit box at the bank and a classic car in a storage unit across town. Because those items are not physically in the home, they may not be legally included in the “all contents” gift. This could mean that your daughter does not inherit them, even if that was your intent.
If you do not use an all-contents clause, another issue can arise. Many estate plans include a catchall provision that says something like “all remaining personal property goes to [a named person].” In practice, such wording means that anything not specifically mentioned elsewhere in your estate plan—such as furniture, household goods, or jewelry—will go to that individual. The problem is that this person may not be the same one who inherits your home. If you assumed that the household belongings would automatically go with the house but your estate plan directs “all remaining personal property” to someone else, the result can be an unintended split: one person ends up with the house while another gets everything inside it.
Private property rights are ultimately governed by contract law. However, even if you have lived in your home for decades, you may never have read all the fine print in your original purchase documents and deed explaining the exact rights and restrictions you received when you purchased the property. As with the contents of your home, these provisions should be recognized and addressed in your estate plan so your loved one knows exactly what they are getting (and not getting) and can plan accordingly.
The intersection of casual language and legal language is usually not a major issue. Your family and friends (unless they are lawyers) are unlikely to notice or correct you if the two are out of sync.
However, you cannot make this assumption in your estate plan. Lawyers—and possibly judges—will be reviewing your words very closely after you pass. At that point, you will not be around to clarify what you really meant. Common parlance does not work in an estate plan.
To avoid ambiguity and unintended consequences, you must choose your words carefully. Consider these scenarios:
Each of the scenarios above (and many others that are not mentioned) can be avoided with clear instructions within your estate plan that couch every contingency in the language of the law and leave nothing to the imagination—or to the court’s interpretation. Here are some ways to ensure that your home and everything you intend to go with it passes to your beneficiary without undue confusion or complication:
A home is a generous gift, but it can also come with burdens, both anticipated and unanticipated. To know for certain what rights, restrictions, and property accompany a gift of “my home” and to prevent a beneficiary from receiving more (or less) than they bargained for, work with an estate planning attorney to get the transfer details right.
Clear communication in the present and in your estate plan can help avoid family disputes, unintended beneficiaries, unexpected liabilities, and other situations that could impact home ownership. To learn more about the best way to leave your home to your loved one, call us.
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