Specific Bequests
Specific bequests are bequests in your will of a specific dollar amount or certain
property, such as real estate. Specific bequests are paid before all other bequests.
Example: Betsy Smith wills $10,000 to Children’s Hospital of The King’s
Daughters.
Sample language: "I give Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, a
Virginia not-for-profit corporation, federal tax ID Number 54-0506321, located
in Norfolk, Virginia the sum of $10,000 for its general use and purposes."
Percentage Bequests
Percentage bequests designate a percentage of your estate to be distributed to a
beneficiary or charitable organization. Percentage bequests assure that all those
you wish to benefit through your estate will receive a portion of your estate. Your
intent in regard to distributions is maintained, regardless of whether your estate
increases or decreases in value.
Example: Betsy Smith leaves 25 percent of her estate to Children’s Hospital of
The King’s Daughters with the balance (75 percent) divided between her
brother and sister.
Sample language: "I give to Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters, a
Virginia not-for-profit corporation, federal tax ID Number 54-0506321, located
in Norfolk, Virginia, twenty-five percent (25%) of my estate for its general use
and purposes with the balance divided equally between my brother Sam Smith
of ABC Hometown and my sister Mary Jane Smith of ABC Hometown."
Residual Bequests
Residual bequests are bequests of any assets remaining after all other specific
bequests, death taxes and administrative expenses have been satisfied, ensuring all
your personal bequests will be satisfied first. CHKD, as a charitable beneficiary,
will receive what is left of the underlying value of your estate.
Example: Betsy Smith leaves her nieces and nephews $200,000 in several
specific bequests and instructs her executor to distribute the balance of her estate
to Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters to establish a memorial in her
family’s name.
Sample language: "All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, of what so
ever kind and where so ever situate, shall be distributed to Children’s Hospital
of The King’s Daughters, a Virginia not-for-profit corporation, federal tax ID
Number 54-0506321, located in Norfolk, Virginia to be deposited into its
general endowment fund as a memorial for the deceased members of the Smith
Family."
Contingent Bequests
Contingent bequests are effective when your primary beneficiary predeceases
you.
Example: If Betsy Smith’s brother dies before her, Betsy leaves his bequest to
Children’s Hospital of The King’s Daughters.
Sample language: "I give to my brother Joseph Smith, of ABC Hometown the
sum of $25,000 and if my brother Joseph Smith is not living at the time of my
death, I direct the amount due him be paid to Children’s Hospital of The King’s
Daughters, a Virginia not-for-profit corporation, federal tax ID Number 54-
0506321, located in Norfolk, Virginia for its general uses and purposes."
Speak to Your Attorney Regarding Language
You should speak with your attorney regarding appropriate and specific language
to include in your will or in a revocable living trust.
You may also amend an existing will or trust to make a gift to Children’s Hospital
of The King’s Daughters. Your attorney can prepare the simple document, a
codicil, which adds a new bequest while reaffirming the other terms of your will.
Similarly, he or she can prepare an amendment to your revocable trust to add
CHKD as a beneficiary.
All donors who make planned gifts to Children’s Hospital of The King’s
Daughters qualify for membership in The Beth Duke Legacy Society, our special
group of donors who have committed to remembering CHKD as part of their
legacy. For more information, please contact our office at (757) 668-7070.
Contact
For more information, call Susan Carriker, CHKD's director of planned giving, at (757) 668-7070 or email the development office at legacy@chkd.org.
This information is taken from sources believed to be reliable, but is not guaranteed as to completeness or
accuracy. You are urged to seek the advice of your financial planner, attorney and/or tax advisor to make
certain a contemplated gift fits well into your overall circumstances and planning.