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Unconventional Will Distributions

June 2, 2011 by Kim Barrot, Attorney

 It is a misconception that a Last Will is only needed by people who own real property or who have a sizeable estate. Today, regardless of your wealth you should leave a Last Will identifying who your legal representative, often called an executor, should be and to ensure your belongings are distributed according to your wishes at your death. While many wills customarily leave assets to a surviving spouse, family members or friends, the individuals listed below have unique wishes and designations, most not discovered until after the individual’s death. It is important to remember, while you as an individual can leave your estate to whomever or whatever your wish, not all provisions in a Last Will will be held up in court.

1. Harry Houdini
The renowned master escapee and daredevil died in 1926 on Halloween. Towards the end of his life, Houdini had become mystified by the idea of an afterlife and spiritual mediums. Houdini promised his wife, Bess, that he would contact her in the afterlife, using a pre-planned ten digit secret message that only she would know, to silence naysayers when she eventually reported his presence (she never did). His last will and testament also stated that a séance should be held each anniversary of his death.

2. Gene Roddenberry
The creator of Star Trek and inventor of the notable quote “to boldly go where no man has gone before” made certain to maintain that statement long after his passing. His last will and testament included instructions to have his ashes scattered via a space satellite orbiting earth. The act was carried out in 1997.

3. Charles Vance Miller
 This Toronto-based attorney with a love of practical jokes kept on laughing straight to the grave after his death in 1926. His last will and testament bequeathed a large sum up for grabs to any Toronto woman who could produce the most offspring in the decade following his death. The result became known as the “Great Stork Derby.” Four winners emerged in a tie for nine children; each received about $125,000.

4. Leona Helmsley
The tales of ’80s greed wouldn’t be the same without the real estate investor and hotel owner dubbed the “Queen of Mean”. While she donated about $35 million to charities in the final years of her life, her good deeds were overshadowed by instructions to establish a $12 million trust to her Maltese dog in her last will and testament. The amount was later reduced to $2 million by a judge. By comparison, her grandsons were left $5 million each, but only on the condition that they visit the gravesite of their father each year.

5. Eleanor Ritchey
Heiress to the Quaker State Refining Corporation, Ritchey left about $14 million to her 150 stray dogs. When the last dog died, the remainder was to go to Auburn University Research Foundation with the funds dedicated to research on canine disease.

6. Thomas Shewbridge
While not hugely famous in life, California prune rancher Thomas Shewbridge’s last will and testament edged him a bit closer to notoriety following his death. He turned over shareholder rights of his estate to his two dogs, making them owners of 29,000 stock shares in the local electric company. The dogs regularly attended stockholders’ and board of directors’ meetings.

7. Nina Wang
Once dubbed the richest woman in Asia, Wang left her entire estate valued at $12.8 billion USD to a charity that she and her late husband, who was kidnapped, founded in 1988. The will was bitterly disputed in a lengthy and dramatic court battle between the charity and Wang’s lover at the time of her death, Tony Chan. A fortune teller, married man and “opportunist”, according to the judge who tried the case, Chan was accused of forging a fake will in an attempt to claim rights to the fortune.

8. Dusty Springfield
 The British singer, known for such hits as “I Will Follow Him” made her cat a priority in her last will and testament. Instructions stated that the cat was to be fed imported baby food and serenaded with Springfield’s songs. Additionally, the singer also arranged for the cat to marry his new guardian’s pet cat.

9. Doris Duke
The heiress and daughter of James Buchanan “Buck” Duke, founder of the American Tobacco Company and North Carolina’s Duke University, is said to have “never smiled in pictures” from childhood to death. Her passing created the Doris Duke Foundation, a charitable organization worth more than a billion dollars. However, her last will and testament also stated that $100 million was to be secured in a pet trust for her dogs. The matter was disputed in court for nearly ten years. In 2004, a judge finally awarded $20,000 to two of her former servants who had been caring for the dogs.

10. Mark Gruenwald
The Executive Editor of Captain American and Iron Man, as well as being involved in other Marvel Comics, Gruenwald stated that he wished for his ashes to be mixed with the ink used to print the comic books. They were.

For the complete article, please reference the article 10 Strange Will and Testaments

Filed Under: General

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