I was a caregiver for a lady who has since passed away. When she passed i was asked if i wanted her dog. I said yes, i love that dog and really loved my client.. Well it turns out she left 5% of her estate to whoever got her dog. I had no idea the dog was in the will. Now the company I work for is demanding copies of the will and court papers i got in the mail. The other people in her will says no, they don't want my work to have their info and how much the ladies estate is. My boss said she don't want me to have financial gain out of this and insisting someone gives me money when i need it for the dog. I feel awful i feel is if my work is over stepping their boundaries. What if the dog has an emergency and i have to rush it to the vet but don't have the money upfront to give the vet? I was just going to open a account for the dog so if he needed something it would be there. I feel if i don't give my boss a copy she will fire me. I live in Kansas and work for a company that helps the elderly stay in their homes, instead of having to go to a nursing home.. This really has me upset i have even cried i don't know what to do.
Just so you're clear, POA ended when the dog's mom - so to speak - died; then, I assume, the same person who held POA took over as her executor. I don't think the question of undue influence can arise, because the request for you to take ownership didn't even arise until after the death of the person you were caring for - you could not possibly have engineered the bequest. I hope you have a happy time to look forward to with your new best friend! - and good luck, I'm sure you'll have no trouble finding a better agency.
Keep us updated! Best wishes.
If your company fires you over this, get a good labor law attorney. Also, good caregivers are hard to find, and you sound like a loving, caring person. You will be able to find another job.
In terms of seeing the will, your employer has as much right as anybody else to see it - it's now a public document - and can't be prevented from doing so. She can apply to the court for sight of it, if she likes. Good! Then she'll see for herself that you - you in person, not you as an agent of your employer - were left that money fair and square.
Just one question: who, exactly, asked you if you wanted to keep the dog? I'm really, really hoping it was this kind lady's executor. But in any case, if the will has been through probate, and you've already been given the money, you go right ahead and open a new account with it. You're in the clear.
I don't like the way your employer has dealt with you - it's completely out of proportion for her to have been so aggressive about this - so I agree that you would probably do best to move on and ask the family for references. Having said that, I'm now going to try to see it from your employer's point of view.
Now, she's running an agency that supplies home care givers to help vulnerable people continue to live in their own homes; and reputation means everything in that business. In your case, she's done her job so well that she found the family a carer who was loved and trusted by them, and loved her client back. Great. But if you look at it from the angle of her agency's reputation, and if "people" - busybodies, gossips, you know the type - start spreading the word that "so-and-so was left money," and the amount you were left mysteriously grows in the rumour, and everyone forgets about the dog… well, it could start to smell a bit fishy. EVEN THOUGH YOU'VE DONE NOTHING WRONG AT ALL. So, my charitable version is that she's thinking she can say: "Look how ethical we are! Our late client left money for the care of her pet. We even continue to safeguard the money, and the pet is now happy living with one of our marvellous caregivers…"
The cynical version would say that she'd charge a fee for this service, or plain walk off with the cash in the form of 'commission' or some such thing. But I really doubt that. I think she's trying to be squeaky clean, and needs to calm down about it.
Here's what I'd do. I'd ask your late client's executor (the name will be on the will and the court documents) to write to your employer, as a personal favour to you, and spell out all of the relevant details; and tell your employer you have asked for the information to be sent to her. And that's all I'd do. If she continues to badger you about seeing your copies, tell her you've been told they are confidential documents and you are not allowed to circulate them. (You have been told that, it's true. Only by me, but she doesn't need to know that part. Also, it probably is true for some of the correspondence - check what it says on the letters.)
Cuddle the dog, enjoy your happy memories of caring for that nice lady, and don't let your employer bully you. People don't place their late mothers' beloved pets in the hands of those who can't be trusted. Bless you.
If the agency you work for never had you sign for receiving their policy, if they even have one, they don't have a leg to stand on. I totally agree with AKdaughter. The 5% of estate was to be given to whomever has the dog. And I hope it is enough for whatever you need to care for the dog. Sure hope you don't have a dog custody battle on your hands! Someone suggested a site called AVVO. It is a site where lawyers give free advice. I have already used it with good results.
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