IHTM09032 - Investigating accounts: building up
a picture of the deceased or transferor
When carrying out an investigation you should try to put
yourself in the shoes of the deceased and try to build up picture
of the deceased’s lifestyle and financial affairs. You should
consider, for example,
- what planning for retirement the deceased
may have made bearing in mind the person’s occupation and
family circumstances?
- if the deceased died young it may be that
no planning was entered into so what life policies, death in
service benefits or if the person died in an accident, insurance
payments, might you expect to find in an account
- did the deceased have substantial
investments if so are there any PEPs, TESSAs, ISAs or National
Savings investments included in the account – it would be
unusual for a serious personal investor not to have investments
that are exempt from income tax.
- whether the liabilities are consistent
with what you would expect from what you know about the
deceased
- what does the information in the will and
whatever else you know about the deceased tell you about the
possibility of tax planning, including the possibility of lifetime
transfers during the deceased’s lifetime?
- did someone have a Power of Attorney over
the deceased’s affairs?
- was the deceased in the habit of making
substantial family loans or gifts?.
You should use the whole range of information sources (
IHTM09251) available to you to help
build up this picture.
Where possible you should try to verify your concerns about
possible omissions or inaccuracies in the account. For example, if
you expect to find substantial lifetime transfers and there are
none or very little has been shown as gifted then you may want
check the tax papers or records of the deceased
(This text has been withheld because of exemptions in the
Freedom of Information Act 2000)