What a tightwad
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Noir-It-All — 11 years ago(February 26, 2015 09:22 AM)
I, too, was raised to NEVER discuss money.
True: You also want an employee to carry out job without likelihood of being remembered in will.
For example, there are regulations in many states prohibiting staff at long term care centers accepting money from the patient while the patient is alive. There is concern about wills as well.
"Two more swords and I'll be Queen of the Monkey People." Roseanne -
EJverh — 11 years ago(March 04, 2015 05:57 AM)
Oh for crying out loud, it was a maid and that is not a small sum. It's not like she worked for her for free all those years. I'm sure she got paid well with quite a few benefits or else she wouldn't have worked for her that long. If their relationship had been like Kate Hepburn's and her longtime maid/secretary/companion and friend, I'm sure she would have left her a generous sum like Hepburn herself.
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DorianGray502 — 9 years ago(August 01, 2016 07:22 AM)
As opposed to someone like Marilyn Monroe's maid who spyed on her, reported on her, and helped her leave existence, then lied about it ad nauseam! That's who deserves zero in a will, which is what she got, plus her walking papers that last day. Coincidence? Everything about that death is circumspect.