Quizzes & Puzzles2 mins ago
Executor Of Will
Reading the replies to Jambutty I am prompted to write. I am joint executor of my partners will. When he passed away I rang his bank and asked them to freeze his account and was told they couldn't until they saw the death certificate. I told them it could be a week or more before we could get one and as I knew a direct debit was due wanted them to freeze his account. They declined and said it would be up to me to chase the money back. No amount of arguing came to any fruition. I told them I had been an executor for both my mother and brother and that their banks had frozen the accounts immediately and then set up an executor account for funds in and out and supplied us with a cheque book. They told me they don't do that without a grant of probate. I told them I would need to pay the funeral and they said I could have all the balances paid into an account of my choice and could then pay any bills. This did not seem right so I made an appointment to go to their local branch and speak to someone face to face, but when I got there she told me we had to talk to the person at the end of the phone who just insisted she couldn't freeze his account and I needed to have the money paid into my account and any cheques etc payable to him would have to be returned to the sender for the payee to be altered. I was so frustrated that I agreed the monies to be paid into into my personal account, but as there are 2 executors I'm not sure where I go from here.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.The bank was correct to demand to see a death certificate. If you knew that a direct debit was due to go out of the account you should have contacted the firm which was due to take the money.
As long as your partner's estate ends up with the right people, there's no reason why the monies shouldn't go via your personal account. ('Good practice' might mean that an executor's account should be opened but it's not a legal requirement).
As long as your partner's estate ends up with the right people, there's no reason why the monies shouldn't go via your personal account. ('Good practice' might mean that an executor's account should be opened but it's not a legal requirement).
Technically you should have a Death Certificate to freeze the account, but in my day we used to use common sense. An account would be frozen immediately & the person advising would be asked to bring Certificate in, if their was any difficulty, the paperwork issued by the Hospital/GP which is taken to Registrar for Cert. would be accepted pro tem. Of course no further action could be taken until the Certificate arrived, the Bank would then pay from the account any utility bills or Funeral Expense invoices presented to them by debiting the account No other assets would be paid away until Probate arrived. However in the interim an Executors account would be opened (on sight of Will) and set up with the cheque book held at Branch all ready to be activated on presentation of Probate. One thing they should never had done is pay any money into your account, they could put you in a very difficult situation should their be any problems with the other Executor or any beneficiaries.
I did take the death certificate with me today (we only got it yesterday)
but felt I had no choice but to take his money away from his bank otherwise it could have caused endless problems trying to reverse payments and receipts which we could well do without. I would like to transfer the money into a separate account but do not have time because £2000 needs to be paid to the undertaker early next week. I am really not happy with this situation
but felt I had no choice but to take his money away from his bank otherwise it could have caused endless problems trying to reverse payments and receipts which we could well do without. I would like to transfer the money into a separate account but do not have time because £2000 needs to be paid to the undertaker early next week. I am really not happy with this situation
In the end Kazal, I rang the solicitor dealing with my Mum's Estate and she told me that money could only be taken out of the accounts if both me and my brother request it, not one without the other. She never mentioned opening another account nor the death certificate. It all seems so complicated to me, you think once a Will is left it will be plain sailing, but it never is. As if losing my beloved Mum wasn't bad enough.