At the time Larry King died, he left seven ex-wives and five children. He died at age 87 on January 23, 2021, after contracting Covid and then succumbing to an infection. Immediately after his death, his estate went straight to probate court.
If only he would have followed the advice that any estate-planning attorney could have given him. Estate plans should be regularly reviewed and competently updated, especially any time there are changes to the family.
King married his last wife, Shawn Southwick, in 1997. In 2015, the couple created an estate plan, in which Shawn was named King’s trustee and in which the couple signed post-nuptial contracts that limited King’s power to give leave bequests to his children.
Four years later, in early to mid-2019, King had a stroke, in addition to suffering numerous other grave health problems. Later that year, after over twenty years of marriage, King filed for divorce from Shawn. The divorce was never finalized.
Then, after that, King handwrote a one-page will that purported to leave his property equally among his five children. The document is barely legible and contains words and phrases that were scratched out. Its language is ambiguous. It does not mention Shawn. Later, in 2020, after two of King’s children died, he neglected to update the document, which he should have done to direct where the deceased children’s shares should go.
On King’s death, one of his children, relying on the handwritten document, petitioned to administrate the estate. Wife Shawn challenged, alleging that in later years King had become susceptible to undue influence and that he lacked mental capacity. To further complicate matters, California is a community-property state, meaning that Shawn could have an independent right to fifty percent of any assets acquired during the marriage.
The regrettable consequence of all this, which could have been avoided if King had consulted with an estate-planning attorney, is that the King estate will be tied up in a lengthy, costly, public battle. Not only must the family grieve the untimely deaths of two of the King children and the passing of the family patriarch, but they must also suffer the aspersions cast on King’s abilities in his final years.
The moral of the story? If King wanted to change his 2015 estate plan, he should have consulted an attorney. He never should have created a document that was open to such serious challenge, especially given the number of marriages and children involved, at a time when his health was frail.
King may have been a great and much-lauded figure, but he has left behind an object lesson in why responsible estate planning is so very important. And if you think this matters less for you because you haven’t had as many spouses and don’t own as much, think again. If you leave your estate open to this kind of happenstance, the money it will cost to fix it later will eat up a greater percentage of what should go to your family instead. Be sure to keep your plan current. Give us a call at our Albuquerque office at (505) 830-0202 – we would be happy to help.