State: Massachusetts
My now deceased mom asked me to come home to help her last year, at her expense. The agreement was she'd pay travel expenses and I would help her around the house and run errands for her, as she was paralyzed. She purchased my airline ticket. Months before the trip I was struggling financially, so she offered (I did not ask) me money. I accepted the offer, and she told me to just pay her back with my travel expenses. In other words: instead of her paying for my travel expenses when I was at her house, just use my own money toward the payoff.
I am told this is considered a gift. But she wrote "loan" in the margin of the check. Our agreement was verbal. There are no contracts stating there was a loan. Her estate is insolvent and the executor is asking for proof this was paid back. Even after explaining to him and showing my bank statements that I spent that money on the trip to reimburse her, he keeps saying "pay it back" and that my bank statements are not sufficient evidence.
I'm told by some people that with no formal contract of a loan, I can't be held accountable, as it's not part of the estate. There was no will or living will acknowledging this "loan", and that this was a private transaction and none of the executor's business. All there is is a record that she wrote me a check and wrote "loan" in the margin. Someone told me that is no more legally binding than writing "paid in full" on a mortgage payment.
Since it wasn't an official loan, it was more her fronting the money to me and I spent it as we agreed. Can the court come after me? Does the executor have a right to harass me? Isn't the burden of proof on them to prove there was a loan?
My now deceased mom asked me to come home to help her last year, at her expense. The agreement was she'd pay travel expenses and I would help her around the house and run errands for her, as she was paralyzed. She purchased my airline ticket. Months before the trip I was struggling financially, so she offered (I did not ask) me money. I accepted the offer, and she told me to just pay her back with my travel expenses. In other words: instead of her paying for my travel expenses when I was at her house, just use my own money toward the payoff.
I am told this is considered a gift. But she wrote "loan" in the margin of the check. Our agreement was verbal. There are no contracts stating there was a loan. Her estate is insolvent and the executor is asking for proof this was paid back. Even after explaining to him and showing my bank statements that I spent that money on the trip to reimburse her, he keeps saying "pay it back" and that my bank statements are not sufficient evidence.
I'm told by some people that with no formal contract of a loan, I can't be held accountable, as it's not part of the estate. There was no will or living will acknowledging this "loan", and that this was a private transaction and none of the executor's business. All there is is a record that she wrote me a check and wrote "loan" in the margin. Someone told me that is no more legally binding than writing "paid in full" on a mortgage payment.
Since it wasn't an official loan, it was more her fronting the money to me and I spent it as we agreed. Can the court come after me? Does the executor have a right to harass me? Isn't the burden of proof on them to prove there was a loan?