Your Pets: After Your Passing, What Happens?

  • By lemaster
  • 11 Jul, 2016

Just read an interesting article by Melissa Subject and Catherine Eberl and of Hodgson Russ LLP, a NYC law firm, concerning trusts to take care of horses. Those who would like to read the article can find it at: http://www.jdsupra.com/legalnews/estate-planning-for-your-horses-protect-20333/?utm_source=LU_Emails.

I was taken by the article because during my recent vacation in Sratoga Springs, NY, in addition to going to the track, we visited a place called Old Friends at Cabin Creek, the Bobby Frankel Division, in Greenfield Center, NY, a few miles from Saratoga. This retirement home for race horses is a division of the non-profit Old Friends Thoroughbred Retirement Center in Georgetown, Kentucky. Michael Blowen, formerly a Boston Globe Film critic, founded the Center in 2003 after reading that a Kentucky Derby winner had ended up in a slaughter house. The Center now cares for over 100 retired race horses in three facilities. The New York facility has been operating since 2009 and is home to 15 race horses - some in their 20's. I can attest that the care they receive from mostly volunteers, is wonderful. Their web site is www.oldfriendsatcabincreek.com.

This brings up the greater issue of pets in general. What happens to your dog, cat, pony, horse, any animal, on your demise? You are sure that you heirs or neighbors or paid hands will take care of them, but will they? Do they have the resources, the time, etc.? Are you burdening friends who have the will and the heart but not the means to carry out your wishes?

Think about a trust to take care of your animals on your passing. You can pick a knowledgeable person to be trustee, someone who knows how to take care of your animal(s). In addition, a person serving as a trustee has a fiduciary duty to carry out the terms of the trust. You can fund the trust through your will or independently. Certainly your pets, your extended family, could well enter into your estate planning.