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today23 May 2023 1
New research from a study of 2,000 UK residents has shown that an axe, a stuffed snake and a tortoise are not the weirdest things people have been left in wills.
Independent research for a legal technology company was designed to find out more about estate planning and found that people had inherited various quirky items from a horse, to a bed, to a Victorian trumpet. However, the weirdest items included: one sock and one shoe, my father’s spade and “my granny’s false teeth”!
Ben Furlong, Customer Services Director for Estatesearch said: “Much of our work is about supporting clients in identifying the full extent of a person's estate, in a bereavement or loss of mental capacity case. This was a serious study to ascertain how easily people can locate or already know the whereabouts of assets like life insurance, pensions, savings, premium bonds and share certificates. It revealed that 30% of people can’t easily locate or don’t know the whereabouts of their personal pensions for example, the same applied to 32% when questioned about other policies such as life insurance. A further 38% of people had not, or were unsure, if they had informed their next of kin where to find information pertaining to a National Savings and Investments account.
“We also discovered less than half the respondents have a will (47%) and of these, less than a third say that it is up to date (28%).”
Further findings included:
Ben Furlong continued: “Inspired by the Bond film Skyfall, where Judi Dench’s character M left James Bond a ‘Bulldog figurine’ in her Will, we also decided to find out what interesting or unusual items people had inherited. Further answers included: a boat, a cutlery set, an egg timer, a penny, a torch, a handmade hair spray can cover and a gun!
“Although this question was designed to be lighthearted, our survey highlights the real challenges which families and their executors face when it comes to identifying and locating the assets of the deceased. Over time, it’s easy to lose track of pension pots, premium bonds or life insurance policies. It is estimated that there is over £200 Billion in unclaimed assets in the UK including £1.45 Billion in banks and building societies and £3.4 Billion dormant assets in National Savings and Investments. In 2016, there was £15 Billion in unclaimed pension funds, while there are a further £640 Million in dormant share registrations.
“On behalf of one solicitor, our asset and liability search recently identified an unknown bank account containing over £75k, and this meant those funds were able to rightfully distributed to the beneficiaries. The results of this research will now be used to educate and inform private client solicitors about the challenges and solutions available to support their due diligence processes in identifying estate assets.”
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