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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Step mother gifting half brother his ‘birth right’ inheritance

396 replies

Undertherainbow00 · 04/06/2022 20:01

I just need somewhere to vent - I’m sure I will be shot down for being unreasonable but maybe someone will see my point of view or will enable me to view this through a different lens…
Family history in brief - step mother has been in my life since just before I turned five (I’m now 43) and she and my father began dating. My parents marriage broke down because of his alcoholism but being the 80’s, the judge decided he could still have my sister and I every other weekend. As a side note, step mother was eight years younger than my father and was approaching her 21st birthday when they got together. She too had a problem with alcohol but they masked their problems to the wider outside world… Her parents were not happy that she was dating an older man who was divorced with two children. However, as time went by, her parents (mainly her mother) warmed to my sister and I. When I was fourteen, my father and step mother had their child, a son. I should add that at this point neither of them drank but my father still had his uncontrollable temper that was often directed at me. She actively encouraged his discipline methods but would also be there to comfort me through my tears.
I fell pregnant at sixteen and to my astonishment both my father and step mother were supportive of my choice to keep the pregnancy. However, it could been seen as fulfilling a prophecy of their making… Problem child, pregnant at sixteen. I would just like to add, any problems I had were directed at myself - eating disorder, self harm and suicide attempts.
I completely got my life together once I was pregnant - worked and set up a home on my own.
That was all many moons ago now and since then I have made an attempt to improve my life chances. I returned to education as an adult and I have a career. However, at the ripe old age of forty three - I have never owned or have been in a position to save a deposit for a house.
Step mother engineered hers and my father’s will like this - their house split 50/50 her share to my half brother and my father’s 50 % share split three ways between all three siblings. Fair?
Anyway, her parents died several years back and left her a significant inheritance. She bought her two siblings out of the parents house as she didn’t want to sell it at that point. Today she has told me that she is selling it as my half brother is very anxious about approaching thirty without owning his own property. She is gifting him the entire proceeds of the house sale - a minimum of £500,000. I just sat there listening to her monologue of how much of his income is wasted in rent - I really can’t relate can I?
She waffled on that it was his birth right as they were his grandparents.
I feel SO angry as their property was bought from the sale of my parents house - so by that logic, my sister and I should have a greater share of their house.
My step mother has always spouted that she loves us all the same but words and actions are completely at odds with the reality of what our lives have been.
I feel bitter that I have forgiven them for their appalling behaviour when I was a child and I have never shared my experiences with my half brother. I have stood back and watched him have everything in life that I didn’t but this has really rocked me and I feel terrible for feeling like this. I am jealous that he will have a home of his own as I fear I never will.
I apologise for this ramble but if you got to the end - thank you! It was cathartic to just get it out of my head!

OP posts:
MountainClimber22 · 04/06/2022 21:07

I can see why you are jealous but you are being unreasonable. Sorry. I eoukd be too in the situation, who doesn't want a share of all that money after all. But it's not yours and how they are splitting the house is only fair.

AnneLovesGilbert · 04/06/2022 21:08

It’s not her fault you haven’t bought a house. It’s really really not her fault you had a baby at 16. You seem to blame her for your situation more than your actual mother. How is that fair?!

They’ve done what most blended families, including us, have done about splitting assets in wills. It’s completely fair.

Focus on improving your own lot and stop being jealous and resentful.

Start owning your choices.

Remember what she’s done for you already. M

Honestly.

whumpthereitis · 04/06/2022 21:08

While your feelings are understandable, seeing your half brother benefit in a way you haven’t and won’t, that does mean that your stepmother has done anything wrong.

user1473878824 · 04/06/2022 21:08

I love the bones of my stepson but he won’t be getting any inheritance passed on from my mother, that will go to my children.

diddl · 04/06/2022 21:10

I'm finding it quite difficult to follow who left who what tbh.

If your dad & stepmother sold their house to buy stepmother's parents house surely that was up to them?

Happyher · 04/06/2022 21:11

Same happened with my kids. Their stepmother inherited £100,000 from her own mother and my kids saw none of it but I never expected them to and I don’t think they even gave it a second thought. Technically they should inherit some of their dads estate when he dies but if he dies before his wife intestate they may get nothing. They will however split my estate 50/50.

GreenRainbowSun · 04/06/2022 21:11

I don't think you are being unreasonable to feel like you do - she is in her rights legally of course but it's really insensitive to go on about it to you the way it sounds like she has.

Mally100 · 04/06/2022 21:12

I don't understand why you expect your db's grandma to have left anything to you? Also, your SM is being completely fair here. 100% fair.

SemperIdem · 04/06/2022 21:14

Yabvu

Mally100 · 04/06/2022 21:15

Seaside1972 · 04/06/2022 21:02

I think that the OP is rightly hurt that someone she has seen as a mother, since the age of 5, has shown through division of assets that they do not see her as a daughter. I can completely see why that is difficult for you. It is incredibly insensitive of your step mother to talk to you about your ‘poor’ brother. Is there a way for you to get past this? One thing is for sure. Do not step in to do any care if she ends up needing it. You’ll need to focus your time and energy on paying the rent 😉

oh please . The op has her own mother. This isn't her mother, the sm is doing the right thing. SM on here can never be in the right 🙄

KangarooKenny · 04/06/2022 21:15

It’s been split right. Her half to her child, and his half between his children.

MountainClimber22 · 04/06/2022 21:16

I don't expect anything from my step dad when he passes and wouldn't be jealous of my half siblings when they inherit. I never included my step children in my will.

LeoOliver · 04/06/2022 21:16

This sounds reasonable. I wouldn't expect anything from my step mum as I have my own mum.

gotthis · 04/06/2022 21:16

I know this is legal, but don't understand why people think it is fair. There's a shared asset and three beneficiaries. 3 children, 3 way split would be fair, surely, unless there are other complications such as a child who will always need care, or a child who can not expect to inherit from anywhere else.

Beamur · 04/06/2022 21:18

Mine and DH assets are similarly divided. Half each of our shared assets. Mine goes 100% to DD. DH's is split 3 ways.
My Mum's house goes directly to DD.
My SC's will probably inherit fairly well from their Mum/Granny (unless care home fees happen)

OldTinHat · 04/06/2022 21:18

Sorry but agree, I think she's right and fair imo. I'd do the same.

DPotter · 04/06/2022 21:19

look on the bright side if she dies within 7 years won't your DS have to pay inheritance tax ?

AskingforaBaskin · 04/06/2022 21:19

gotthis · 04/06/2022 21:16

I know this is legal, but don't understand why people think it is fair. There's a shared asset and three beneficiaries. 3 children, 3 way split would be fair, surely, unless there are other complications such as a child who will always need care, or a child who can not expect to inherit from anywhere else.

Because the mother wants to pass her money onto her child. She doesn't need to pass on her money to children who aren't hers.

Or her child would inherit once.

The OP and her sister will inherit from their mother

Undertherainbow00 · 04/06/2022 21:20

Step mother inherited 1/3 of her parents house and a cash amount. She used some of her lump sum to buy out her siblings shares of the house.

OP posts:
Mally100 · 04/06/2022 21:20

gotthis · 04/06/2022 21:16

I know this is legal, but don't understand why people think it is fair. There's a shared asset and three beneficiaries. 3 children, 3 way split would be fair, surely, unless there are other complications such as a child who will always need care, or a child who can not expect to inherit from anywhere else.

But the op isn't her SM child, so it is fair. It's funny how the SM is wrong in every single circumstance.

whumpthereitis · 04/06/2022 21:20

gotthis · 04/06/2022 21:16

I know this is legal, but don't understand why people think it is fair. There's a shared asset and three beneficiaries. 3 children, 3 way split would be fair, surely, unless there are other complications such as a child who will always need care, or a child who can not expect to inherit from anywhere else.

Because each person has two parents, and two sets of grandparents, to (potentially) inherit from. Why is it ‘fair’ for stepchildren to have three?

MountainClimber22 · 04/06/2022 21:22

Undertherainbow00 · 04/06/2022 21:20

Step mother inherited 1/3 of her parents house and a cash amount. She used some of her lump sum to buy out her siblings shares of the house.

Did you miss something off the end of that? What's the issue?

whumpthereitis · 04/06/2022 21:22

DPotter · 04/06/2022 21:19

look on the bright side if she dies within 7 years won't your DS have to pay inheritance tax ?

The bright side for someone consumed by bitterness and spite, presumably.

Which is to say, not actually a bright side.

Mally100 · 04/06/2022 21:23

DPotter · 04/06/2022 21:19

look on the bright side if she dies within 7 years won't your DS have to pay inheritance tax ?

Vile.

NotMushroomInEre · 04/06/2022 21:24

Her engineering of their will is absurd. It should be split between the 3 of you, equally.

What she's done with her parent's inheritance isn't wrong, however, if she 'loves' you all the same, it is immoral and suggests that she is a lying bitch.

I have a half-sister, I refer to her as my sister, just as I do my full sister. Our mum died when I was 21, my younger sister is 9 years younger than me. Her dad, my step-dad, recently died and left the house to her. I'm happy that my 32 year old sister is now mortgage free and stable. However, I've been able to make sure that I'm secure. I also know that if I wasn't, she would make sure I was.

I don't think YABU, and I hope your step-mum dies before your dad. Hopefully then, that ridiculous clause in the sharing of the estate can be rectified.

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