Five years after her death, the final wishes of music superstar Aretha Franklin are still unsettled. As the AP reports, an unusual trial begins next Monday to determine which of two handwritten wills, including one found in couch cushions, will guide how her estate is handled. The Queen of Soul, who had four sons, did not have a formal, typewritten will in place, despite years of health problems and efforts to get one done. But under Michigan law, it's still possible to treat other documents—with scribbles, scratch-outs, and hard-to-read passage—as her commands. The dispute is pitting a son against other sons. Ted White II believes papers dated in 2010 should mainly control the estate, while Kecalf Franklin and Edward Franklin favor a 2014 document. Both were discovered in Franklin's suburban Detroit home, months after her death from pancreatic cancer in 2018 at age 76.
Franklin was a global star for decades, known especially for hits like "Think," "I Say a Little Prayer," and "Respect." She was treated like royalty in death, her body transported in a 1940 Cadillac hearse to a Detroit museum where thousands of people visited in August 2018. "She was the people's diva," sociologist Michael Eric Dyson said at the time. It was immediately known that Franklin had died without a will, which meant her four sons likely would share assets worth millions, including real estate in suburban Detroit, furs, gowns, jewelry, and future royalties from her works. A niece, Sabrina Owens, agreed to be personal representative or executor. "My advice? Go slow, be careful and be smart," Franklin's friend, businessman Ron Moten, told the sons at the funeral. Months later, in spring 2019, the estate was turned upside down.
Owens reported that a handwritten will dated 2010 was found in a cabinet and another handwritten will, dated 2014, was discovered inside a notebook under cushions at Franklin's home. There are differences between the documents, though they both appear to indicate the sons would share income from music and copyrights, which seems to make that issue less contentious than a few others.The older will lists son Ted White II and Owens as co-executors and says Kecalf and Edward Franklin "must take business classes and get a certificate or a degree" to benefit from the estate. But the 2014 version crosses out White's name as executor and has Kecalf Franklin in his place. There's no mention of business classes. Kecalf Franklin and grandchildren would get his mother's main home in Bloomfield Hills, which was valued at $1.1 million when she died but is worth much more today. "It's the crown jewel," said Craig Smith, attorney for Edward Franklin.
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For five years, Aretha Franklin's estate has been handled at different times by three executors. Owens quit in 2020, citing a "rift" among the sons. She was succeeded by Reginald Turner, a local lawyer who also served as president of the American Bar Association. His last accounting in March showed the estate had income of $3.9 million during the previous 12-month period and a similar amount of spending, including more than $900,000 in legal fees to various firms. Overall assets were pegged at $4.1 million, mostly cash and real estate, though Franklin's creative works and intellectual property were undervalued with just a nominal $1 figure. The estate since 2020 has paid at least $8.1 million to the Internal Revenue Service, which had a claim for taxes after the singer's death, court filings show. "The IRS claims took priority. The estate wasn't going anywhere until the IRS got paid off," Smith said.
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