Aretha Franklin: Three Handwritten Wills Discovered in Singer's Home
Three
handwritten wills have been found at the home of Aretha Franklin, months after
the "Queen of Soul's" death.
Franklin
died from pancreatic cancer in August and family members said at the time that
she had left no will.
But three
documents were found earlier this month. Two from 2010 were recovered from
a locked cabinet after a key was located.
One, dated
March 2014, was hidden under living room cushions, a lawyer for Franklin's
estate said.
The will,
which was written inside a spiral notebook, appears to leave her assets to her
family, said the lawyer, David Bennett.
Some of the
writing is very hard to decipher and the four pages have words scratched out
and phrases written in the margins.
Bennett, who
was Franklin's lawyer for more than 40 years, filed the wills on Monday. He
told a judge that he's not sure if they are legal under Michigan law.
He added
that the wills had been shared with Franklin's four sons or their lawyers, but
they had not reached a deal on whether any of them should be considered valid.
A statement
from the Franklin estate said two sons object to the wills.
A hearing is
scheduled for 12 June.
In a
separate court filing, Franklin's son Kecalf Franklin said his mother wanted
him to serve as representative of the estate in the 2014 will but the estate
statement confirmed that Sabrina Owens, an administrator at the University of
Michigan, will continue to serve as its representative.
Mr Franklin
is currently objecting to plans to sell a piece of land next to his mother's
Oakland County home for $325,000 (£255,960).
Aretha
Franklin was one of the most celebrated soul vocalists of the 60s and 70s.
She was
recently honoured with a posthumous Pulitzer Prize.; and a previously
unseen 1972 movie of the star recording her gospel album Amazing Grace, has
just hit cinemas.
FROM
.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-
No comments