by Kevon K K Charles
Managing Partner, K C Legal Consultancy, Attorneys-at-Law
State administration is often viewed as a process concerned primarily with collecting assets, settling liabilities, and distributing an estate to beneficiaries.
In practice, however, it has increasingly become a process that intersects with broader compliance and due diligence considerations. What may appear to be a straightforward estate can quickly become more complex once financial institutions, property transactions, and questions of verification begin to arise.
More than collecting assets
On a day-to-day basis, estate practitioners are frequently required to do far more than identify what forms part of an estate.
There is often a need to verify ownership, confirm the existence and value of assets, identify beneficiaries, and satisfy institutional requirements before assets can be accessed or transferred. In many cases, this process is relatively routine. In others, it is not.
Where the difficulties begin
A deceased may have operated accounts in different jurisdictions, held property through a company, or held assets informally over many years.
At that point, the executor or administrator is no longer simply gathering assets. Questions begin to arise:
- Who ultimately owned the asset?
- Can the source of funds be explained?
- Are the beneficiaries properly identifiable?
- Are there sufficient records to satisfy the relevant institutions?
These issues are not always indicative of wrongdoing. Particularly in the Caribbean context, many family and property arrangements were developed long before modern compliance expectations became part of everyday legal practice.
The financial institution perspective
One of the more common frustrations in estate administration arises in dealing with financial institutions.
Executors and beneficiaries may sometimes view requests for documentation as excessive or unnecessary, particularly where the family relationship is well known or undisputed.
From the institution’s perspective, however, there now exists a broader obligation to properly verify the movement and distribution of assets.
This can result in requests for:
- identification documents
- proof of address
- source of funds information
- supporting corporate records
- and verification of beneficiary entitlements
What was once treated as a relatively private family matter now operates within a more structured compliance environment.
Identifying beneficiaries
Even identifying beneficiaries can become more involved than many expect. In some instances, beneficiaries may reside abroad, have limited documentation, or derive their entitlement through informal family arrangements that were never properly recorded.
The difficulty is not always the legal entitlement itself. The difficulty is often proving it in a manner that satisfies the institutions involved.
A shifting landscape
For estate practitioners, this reflects a broader shift in the administration of estates.
The role of the executor or administrator is no longer confined to collecting and distributing assets. Increasingly, there is also a need to navigate due diligence requirements, institutional compliance procedures, and issues relating to transparency and verification. This does not necessarily make estate administration adversarial or suspicious. It does, however, require a level of preparation and structure that was not always necessary in the past.
Closing reflection
Estate administration has always involved questions of responsibility and trust. Increasingly, it also involves questions of verification. It is not always the most straightforward part of the process, but very much an emerging reality of modern estate practice in the Caribbean.
This article forms part of a continuing examination of the evolving relationship between wealth, property, and compliance in the Caribbean.





















