zwiebel
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- Oct 1, 2012
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I am giving the daughters the benefit of the doubt that some or all did not have copies of the will. Didn't one of them send an attorney's letter demanding it? If even an attorney didn't know it could be obtained.....?
Now I have been trying to come up with neutral reasons why the eve of FH's return was a good time for three adult women to descend on an 81 year-old man and demand copies. Here I am encountering difficulties.
I just can't do it. Because he hadn't supplied it for 8 days, 8 weeks, 8 months?
It doesn't wash. Why then? Why not wait until FH was back and settled in? According to daughters' lawyer, FH and Bob had already offered to hand over many of Georgia's things, at FH's prompting. So surely commonsense would tell a person it was better to wait until Mr and Mrs Harrod had settled in, the excitement had died down, then try again? I am sure they must have known their mother's will was insignificant compared to the main bulk of the trust, still in Bob's control. That contained the properties, the investments, the cash, the insurance policies.
There's no escaping the conclusion really, that this was a meeting at the height of panic; panic to ensure nobody would get a single penny or possession that the daughters thought they were entitled to from the family fortune. From the houses to the teacups.
It's an inescapable conclusion, from their actions since, that they thought they were entitled to it all. And they've got it now. Almost.
Now I have been trying to come up with neutral reasons why the eve of FH's return was a good time for three adult women to descend on an 81 year-old man and demand copies. Here I am encountering difficulties.
I just can't do it. Because he hadn't supplied it for 8 days, 8 weeks, 8 months?
It doesn't wash. Why then? Why not wait until FH was back and settled in? According to daughters' lawyer, FH and Bob had already offered to hand over many of Georgia's things, at FH's prompting. So surely commonsense would tell a person it was better to wait until Mr and Mrs Harrod had settled in, the excitement had died down, then try again? I am sure they must have known their mother's will was insignificant compared to the main bulk of the trust, still in Bob's control. That contained the properties, the investments, the cash, the insurance policies.
There's no escaping the conclusion really, that this was a meeting at the height of panic; panic to ensure nobody would get a single penny or possession that the daughters thought they were entitled to from the family fortune. From the houses to the teacups.
It's an inescapable conclusion, from their actions since, that they thought they were entitled to it all. And they've got it now. Almost.