PAY DIRTKARA MCGUIRE
Bea Anderson and her siblings have always made decisions about their shared cabin with a handshake.
With just a brother and a sister and their spouses to consult, that wasn't so hard. But the cabin on Lake Vermillion, which has been in the family for more than 50 years, will pass to seven families in the next generation.
"When there's more people involved, then you get more opinions. We wanted to set up guidelines about how we feel the cabin can be run successfully," Bea's husband, Jerry Anderson, said.
They needed a plan and turned to a cabin trust.
Without a trust, cabins are often passed to the next generation in equal shares, with equal responsibility for the expenses and upkeep. That arrangement is known as tenants-in-common.
No problem, right? But what if the new generation of owners can't devise a schedule for using the cabin? What if they can't make decisions about whether to put on a new roof or add a garage? What happens if someone wants to sell his share of the cabin? In the event of a divorce or death, does the unrelated spouse get an interest, so a share of the cabin is now owned outside of the family? And if one owner can't afford his share and ultimately files for bankruptcy, then what?
"The solutions to those [issues], if you don't have some mechanism to deal with them, is a court proceeding. And as you can imagine, kids don't get along so well after you serve them papers," said Joel Mullen, a Bloomington attorney who specializes in cabin trusts.
A trust lays out how a cabin is to be owned, cared for, paid for and used once the current owners pass away. It also addresses who will be the trustee. Typically, one or more of the children are selected, but sometimes a neutral third party, such as a bank without an interest in the cabin, is selected.