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i want to give my sister a large sum of money

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bednobs | 19:33 Sat 21st Jan 2012 | Law
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The problem is that she is separated from her useless Finance Specialist of a husband. If i give her a large sum, if they got divorced could he claim any of that money? (it will be significantly more than he will earn in 10 years)
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i would give her 'access' to the sum, from your own pocket and not actually part with the money officially until their divorce is settled!

cath x
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i don't really know if she ever plans to divorce him though, and i want her to have it out right, not have to ask me for it. She lives abroad
Can I be your sister?

Jem
then open an account only known to you and her!

yes he can claim from all her assets should they divorce!
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it's a large amount - people will know she has money because i hope she will spend it. SHe might buy a house or something - i think he'd be quite interested to know where the money came from
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perhaps i'll make her divorce a condition of getting the money
Speak to a lawyer, he/she might be able to give you a clever solution
Open an account for her in your name and give her a debit card so that she has access to it. If its in your name he shouldn't be able to gain from it I would have thought.
speak to a solicitor and see if you can put it in a trust to protect it.
And check on the tax situation bednobs. I didn't think you could gift more than £3000 a year without tax being paid. I could be wrong of course.
You can give as much as you want as a Potentially exempt transfer, but if you die within 7 years there will be tax yo pay on a sliding scale.
why don't you keep the money in a separate account in your own name, and just transfer any to her as she needs it?

You'd need to be careful about the legalities of it though, when I was in insurance you could take out Gifts Inter Vivos insurance in case anything happened to you within 7 years of the gift, to do with tax liability on large bequests.
^ what ubasses said
If she buys a house or any asset whilst she is married then husband may well have a claim.

The only thing I can think of is a trust but I don't know enough about them especially when the beneficiary lives abroad.
Some banks do a 'Third party interest' account.
Open an account in your name with her as the 'third party' and she can operate it as if it was her own.
I have one for an elderly relative from the RBS which works very well.
That doesn't deal with the problem of marital assets though
let her choose the house and buy in your name?
What country is she living in?
If you mean the third party account, hc4361, I think it does. The account would be in bednobs's name, not her sister's and would remain her money.
It just means her sister can access it whenever she wants.
problem is if her sister withdraws the money as purchaes an asset her husband would then probably have a claim on it.

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