Is this person just trying to get her hands on lady's inheritance?

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  • Pollycat
    Pollycat Posts: 34,581
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    Yes, I think she should be in a care home now. Although she's so stubborn she wouldn't want to go and loves her house. Recently she broke her hip and has just got back to house. Social services assessed that she needs two carers to visit everyday now. The '50s' woman still visits as well.
    But it doesn't matter what you think.
    If Social Services have said she needs 2 carers per day why do you think you know better than them?
    Your statement above sounds incredibly arrogant.
    You are her gardener.
    Not her carer.
    Not her doctor.
    Not Social Services.
    Another reason I don't like her is after I sorted the recycling bins on my credit card I went around to get the cash and she said 'can't you get it next week'. She is difficult about paying and questions things and is condescending despite the fact that I go out of my way to do stuff.
    It's possible that this woman's attitude towards you is because she knows you were gossiping with the cleaner.
    Tell her 'Money is due on day of work or no work'.
    I don't know if this is worth reporting but anyone would suspect this wouldn't they?? What does next of kin actually mean as well? She is this. I guess it means nothing, being on the will is what gets you the money.
    You have no idea who is or isn't named on the will.
    And is it really any of your business?
    I live in Bournemouth and for the UK the salaries and availability of jobs is average; they're not great. There are lots of people on pretty low salaries here, however the house prices (because it's a nice area) are high. This leads to a culture of people pretending to be wealthier when they're actually skint. TA salary- £16,000. House price £500,000 I would guess.
    And this has to do with the 90 year old lady because......?
    I only get £10 for an hours work a week. Laughable really, but I just do it because she let's me use her garage to store my gardening equipment for other jobs so I am happy to do lots of poorly paid odd jobs for her which no one else would for the money she pays.
    If you're not happy with the payment you are getting for the work you are doing, don't do it.
    I also (probably similar to the '50s inheritance woman') also care a bit about the German lady because I have known her for so long. And despite being completely nuts and difficult at times has been very warm to me occasionally. But being practical ( I have a child to support) I wouldn't work for £10 a week if I didn't have the storage perk. And I suspect the inheritance woman doesn't have much money herself and is also being practical and hoping for a much bigger reward after all her caring!
    You have no idea how much or how little this lady's friend has.
    You have no idea what expectations she has for a 'reward' for the time she spends with this old lady.

    If you really do feel that the old lady is at risk, report her.
    But don't do it because you think somebody may be getting some money out of it when she dies, do it because you have a genuine concern that she is being taken advantage of.
  • It may be that the 50s lady does have designs on the old lady's money - but if the old lady has no-one else in her life and is enjoying the company and support, then why shouldn't she choose to leave her money to the younger lady?

    I had a terminally ill acquaintance in her 50s who had a small coterie of friends who self-elected to "take care of her", and were hostile to others. As it was, for several years the ill lady enjoyed their guardianship, used their efforts very cheerfully, although sadly none of them were available to hands-on nurse her in her last few months at home (funny that), and they did receive bequests of £5,000 from her will. The rest of the £1m went to a bird charity....

    I'm sure she was well aware of what was going on, but it suited her; whether they were simply very grateful for the windfall they received I don't know, but there is a bit of me that wonders who gained the most from those friendships!

    If you are concerned for the old lady's welfare, you can report it to Social Services, or google Elder Abuse for more groups that give support in such situations. Sometimes gut instinct is spot on...
  • takman
    takman Posts: 3,876
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    I only get £10 for an hours work a week. Laughable really, but I just do it because she let's me use her garage to store my gardening equipment for other jobs so I am happy to do lots of poorly paid odd jobs for her which no one else would for the money she pays.


    I also (probably similar to the '50s inheritance woman') also care a bit about the German lady because I have known her for so long. And despite being completely nuts and difficult at times has been very warm to me occasionally. But being practical ( I have a child to support) I wouldn't work for £10 a week if I didn't have the storage perk. And I suspect the inheritance woman doesn't have much money herself and is also being practical and hoping for a much bigger reward after all her caring!

    So your only helping her out doing these jobs so she continues to let you store your equipment. But if she stopped letting you store your equipment you wouldn't do it anymore?.

    So that's exactly the kind of thing your saying the "inheritance woman" is doing, just on a bigger scale. (Without any evidence)

    So what makes it okay for you to do it but not her ?
  • margaretclare
    margaretclare Posts: 10,789 Forumite
    Yes, I think she should be in a care home now. Although she's so stubborn she wouldn't want to go and loves her house. Recently she broke her hip and has just got back to house. Social services assessed that she needs two carers to visit everyday now.

    Thank the Lord, we don't yet live in the kind of society where a person can be forced to go into a care home just because applepicker thinks they should.

    This kind of remark makes my blood boil.

    The lady in question has been assessed as needing a 'care package' of 2 carer visits daily. Don't forget, she's paying for this. Every one of those visits - that's 2 x 7 weekly - will be costing her money. If she loves her home and wants to stay in it, it is no one else's business.

    All the stuff about Hitler etc is totally irrelevant.

    Just because someone is in the later stages of life and has a certain amount of this world's goods, people seem to feel it is their business to write about it on a public forum. What happened to 'live and let live'?
    [FONT=Times New Roman, serif]Æ[/FONT]r ic wisdom funde, [FONT=Times New Roman, serif]æ[/FONT]r wear[FONT=Times New Roman, serif]ð[/FONT] ic eald.
    Before I found wisdom, I became old.
  • She has 2 carers who go into the house and see the lady. They would report her companion if they could see any concerns.
    Perhaps you don't know the real reason the cleaner was sacked. You only have her version of events. Perhaps the companion suspects that you are in it for the money.
    If you report this lady - have you thought of all the consequences? Perhaps the companion is innocent but told to stay away during the investigation. You may actually make this 500 000 pound householder miserable in the last days of her life.
    If the lady is happy and the carers don't see anything to worry about, then that must be enough.
    weight loss target 23lbs/49lb
  • margaretclare
    margaretclare Posts: 10,789 Forumite
    The OP says the lady is 90. So born in 1926 or 1927. So 18 in May 1945. And presumably still in school

    They used to leave school earlier in those days. They didn't necessarily stay on routinely to age 18.

    I myself left school at 16 in 1951, as did my DH. We could legally have left at 15. I don't know what they did in Germany.
    [FONT=Times New Roman, serif]Æ[/FONT]r ic wisdom funde, [FONT=Times New Roman, serif]æ[/FONT]r wear[FONT=Times New Roman, serif]ð[/FONT] ic eald.
    Before I found wisdom, I became old.
  • She has 2 carers who go into the house and see the lady. They would report her companion if they could see any concerns.
    Perhaps you don't know the real reason the cleaner was sacked. You only have her version of events. Perhaps the companion suspects that you are in it for the money.
    If you report this lady - have you thought of all the consequences? Perhaps the companion is innocent but told to stay away during the investigation. You may actually make this 500 000 pound householder miserable in the last days of her life.
    If the lady is happy and the carers don't see anything to worry about, then that must be enough.


    True. She would be sad without the company. She has another friend but the more friends the better.


    The carers won't work it out any time soon. It took me ages to find everything out. All the neighbours thought she was the carer, and she's been going there for 8 years. Both neighbours thought it! The whole cul-de-sac must think it. I found out she's next of kin and managing the money from the cleaner (who worked there for 15 years ). She got me fired 3 years ago for a year. Come on of course she's after the money!!
  • She has 2 carers who go into the house and see the lady. They would report her companion if they could see any concerns.
    Perhaps you don't know the real reason the cleaner was sacked. You only have her version of events. Perhaps the companion suspects that you are in it for the money.
    If you report this lady - have you thought of all the consequences? Perhaps the companion is innocent but told to stay away during the investigation. You may actually make this 500 000 pound householder miserable in the last days of her life.
    If the lady is happy and the carers don't see anything to worry about, then that must be enough.


    The cleaner quit over not being paid enough. Then there was accusations of stealing and the inheritance woman was a witness. She had been going through the drawers to find the will, I guess to know if the inheritance woman was going to get it all.
  • applepicker
    applepicker Posts: 151 Forumite
    edited 19 March 2017 at 11:15PM
    I just find it annoying when the German lady says how wonderful she is and that she does everything for no money and that she's a teacher when technically she's a TA (anyone can do this). The German lady wouldn't understand that. So she's lying. How she used to be a nurse, that she's a good sweeper of paths lol can use computers and is just so wonderful. That she does everything for no money and doesn't want anything. Then I find out from the cleaner and the inheritance woman that she's the next of kin not from the German lady. That the husband of the inheritance lady (who's an estate agent and gardener) is wonderful because he still tries to do her financial accounts. The last time I spoke to the inheritance lady it was the usual cold chat- I asked how she was and she straight away said- yes, I guess you are worried about your stuff in garage- a nice person would have assumed I was concerned about her health as well as that. But she straight away assumed the worst about me. Why... Because it takes one to know one. That's how she thinks and so assumes other people are like it. She also questioned me whether I was ripping the old lady off over a poxy £10 (which I wasn't and never have). Why does she do this- because she's deceptive and assumes others are. A nice person wouldn't be questioning this. There are a thousand examples of things she's said and done which just make my instincts say she's after the money.


    As someone who has travelled for years as well. I understand people from other cultures quite well. And it's very difficult to understand the complexities of people from a different culture if you didn't grow up there. The German lady is a classic example. Even though she's lived in the UK for over 60 years. She's never worked here and just relied on her English husband (he died 15 years ago). Like many people in the UK who spent the first 25 years in another country she finds it very difficult to work out all the different types of people you meet in this country. From the different classes and parts of Britain and how these affect their personalities. This makes someone like her very easily manipulated.


    The inheritance woman met her when her and her husband knocked on her door 10 years ago as two gardeners. I suspect she spotted the German lady's naivety and has been plotting ever since!
  • takman
    takman Posts: 3,876
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    I just find it annoying when the German lady says how wonderful she is and that she does everything for no money and that she's a teacher when technically she's a TA (anyone can do this). The German lady wouldn't understand that. So she's lying. How she used to be a nurse, that she's a good sweeper of paths lol can use computers and is just so wonderful. That she does everything for no money and doesn't want anything. Then I find out from the cleaner and the inheritance woman that she's the next of kin not from the German lady. That the husband of the inheritance lady (who's an estate agent and gardener) is wonderful because he still tries to do her financial accounts. The last time I spoke to the inheritance lady it was the usual cold chat- I asked how she was and she straight away said- yes, I guess you are worried about your stuff in garage- a nice person would have assumed I was concerned about her health as well as that. But she straight away assumed the worst about me. Why... Because it takes one to know one. That's how she thinks and so assumes other people are like it. She also questioned me whether I was ripping the old lady off over a poxy £10 (which I wasn't and never have). Why does she do this- because she's deceptive and assumes others are. A nice person wouldn't be questioning this. There are a thousand examples of things she's said and done which just make my instincts say she's after the money.


    As someone who has travelled for years as well. I understand people from other cultures quite well. And it's very difficult to understand the complexities of people from a different culture if you didn't grow up there. The German lady is a classic example. Even though she's lived in the UK for over 60 years. She's never worked here and just relied on her English husband (he died 15 years ago). Like many people in the UK who spent the first 25 years in another country she finds it very difficult to work out all the different types of people you meet in this country. From the different classes and parts of Britain and how these affect their personalities. This makes someone like her very easily manipulated.


    The inheritance woman met her when her and her husband knocked on her door 10 years ago as two gardeners. I suspect she spotted the German lady's naivety and has been plotting ever since!

    So what?
    Your using her so you can store your equipment for free and only do little jobs for her because she lets you keep it there. So if your worried about people taking advantage of her then take all your equipment out of her house immediately and keep it somewhere else.

    Atleast the other woman and her husband are actually helping her and other sounds like she quite enjoys their help and their company. None of her family seem like they bother to visit her from what you said. So if this lady wants to give her interintance to someone then they deserve it more than her family who don't bother with her.
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