My neighbor said her friend kept telling her the house is hers and all the content is hers. She got very concerned that
her friend was going to kick her out of the house. I asked if she wants me to call her and tell her to leave her alone and
that the house is already spoken for(Thinking that the will wasn't rewritten). So she told me to come inside to get the phone
number. I see a will and other legal paperwork sitting on the table. The will had a current date on the outside of the envelop.
I asked if I could see it. That's when I discovered it was rewritten and asked if she knew about it and told her what the new will said.
New will left her friend as beneficiary, executor, and power of attorney. She said she didn't know what it said and that her friend was
very forceful in getting her to sign it.
In other words, your neighbor has been told she no longer owns her own home.
It is possible that in addition to the will, that there has been a transfer of title and deed into the "friend's" name.
Because ownership is a matter of public record, check to see if there has been a change.
If there has not been a change in the ownership of record, then you can reassure your neighbor.
However, if there has been a transfer of ownership, then that is highly suspect, especially since your neighbor is alive and hasn't been paid market value of her home. (I'm thinking it is worth more than $1.
)
I ask about the nature of this "friendship", because if it is purely exploitive, it is likely that this person has victimized other people, and at some point it is a police thing, not just a will thing.
I had suggested that, but now she is really confused and doesn't seem to want to trust anyone. I had made an appointment with
her to talk to an elderly law lawyer but she backed out at the last minute. I said just go and talk, you do not need to sign anything.
I was going to let some time pass but she is 87 years old. Old will I was beneficiary, the lawyer was executor and a third person was poa.
Somehow or other, you need to get her to someone trustworthy and competent who can help her unravel this.
A totally crass question, but relevant: how well heeled is your neighbor? I ask this because if she is of modest means, many people go through a lot those assets during the last 6 months of their life, so the issue of inheritance is moot. If she has to go on state assistance due to running out of money, the issue of inheritance is moot. (Although the state would be very interested in a property transfer to a non-relative in that case.)
However, if your neighbor is a bit more comfortable financially, there is reason for greater concern. I am sympathetic; I have an octogenarian relative who has been exploited by a "friend"/neighbor. (I think posted $28K on a debit card?) Fortunately, his financial advisor keeps tabs of such things, and took action.