Barmaid, I suggest you read my my previous posts with some assiduousness before telling me I'm talking nonsense.
Before you start discussing fraud and suchlike, I'd refer you to my earlier comment regarding a discussion I had with the local authority when I said I wished to take up the deferred payment route. My experience having spoken to others in a similar position is that local authorities are reluctant to disclose that they can offer the next-of-kin a deferred payment agreement if they request it. Yes, it is amongst the legalese present on the document that the next-of-kin has to sign following the admission of their relative to a home, but they prefer not to inform the relatives simply because of the cost to them of administering such an agreement.
In my case, I was initially told that the local authority did not operate such a scheme and all payments had to made monthly from income received by the resident. Given that the cost of residency is anything between £500 and £1000 per week, the impracticality of settling the fees by this route soon becomes apparent when the resident has no capital and relies on state income. I'm sure you'll agree with this.
I'm grateful for you comments regarding creditors forcing executors to liquidate any assets, however once again, you've misunderstood. I had an agreement in place to defer the costs until after my mum's death. Due to the agreement, the local authority had to wait for payment in the weeks following that sad occassion. I had informed them that the only capital assets were in the form of my mother's home and they would have to wait until it was sold.
My Solicitor advised me that the local authority could jump up and down as much as they wished, but they could NOT force me to sell my mum's home. I do appreciate your opinion appears to give the contrary view.
The Will had absolutely nothing to do with these events and our solicitor advised me to seek a POA quite early on after my mum had been put into residential care to protect her assets. Throughout the time she was in the home, around three years, I was harrassed at least monthly by the council team responsible for the collection of the fees despite the deferred payment agreement having been in place since around the third month following her admission. They even phoned me one day to tell me they would liquidate my own assets and officially rescind the POA.