The Top 15 Strangest Inheritances

PeopleImages / Getty Images/iStockphoto
PeopleImages / Getty Images/iStockphoto

No one knows what happens after death, but these 15 surviving beneficiaries from around the globe know what happens when a loved one — or a complete stranger — leaves behind a really strange last will and testament. Although the average American is 73% likely to die with debt, as reported by Debt.org, creativity was a much bigger factor than money for these quirky benefactors.

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Presented with equal strangeness and in no particular order, these unusual parting wishes give a new take on how to write a will.

sborisov / Getty Images/iStockphoto
sborisov / Getty Images/iStockphoto

From Anonymous To England

Inheritance: £500,000

In 1928, an anonymous donor left £500,000 to the British government to be used to pay off the “entire national debt.” The problem was, fulfilling the donor’s stipulation proved difficult, as the national debt far exceeded the amount donated.

Ultimately, according to one University of Oxford report, the mysterious “National Fund” was eventually used to pay off part of the national debt after a long bout in the UK government appeals to the High Court.

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miodrag ignjatovic / iStock.com
miodrag ignjatovic / iStock.com

Lucky Dog

Inheritance: $1 million home, six-figure trust fund

When you’ve lived your life as an extremely successful accountant in New York, a million-dollar home and a trust fund aren’t necessarily a strange inheritance to leave behind. It gets a little weirder, though, when the massive inheritance is meant for a Maltese named Bella Mia, as the New York Post reported in 2015.

That’s the plan for Rose Ann Bolasny of Queens, New York. Bella regularly eats filet mignon and wears diamond-studded tiaras. Mrs. Bolasny’s sons — who’ll be inheriting more than their canine sibling — are fine with the will. As of 2025, Bella Mia still resides in New York as a therapy and service dog alongside her trademarked name on her website: “The Million Dollar Maltese.”

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They Own This Town — No, Really

Inheritance: The entire town of Reduction, Pennsylvania

In 1948, John Stawovy accepted a unique proposition: Instead of buying one house in Reduction, Pennsylvania, he took a $10,000 loan and bought all 18 houses, plus the roads and the town’s other structures. By the time he passed away in 2016, Stawovy had served as Reduction’s town engineer, public works chief and mayor, according to Fox Business.

Upon his passing, the town went to Stawovy’s son, David, and his siblings. Unwilling to bear the burden of the town’s 60 residents, the Stawovys asked $1.5 million for the whole shebang in early 2018. By 2023, this listing price was discounted roughly $500,000 to just one one million at $999,900.

Ekaterina Minaeva / Getty Images
Ekaterina Minaeva / Getty Images

Fancy Pants

Inheritance: A pair of Levi’s jeans

When Solomon Warner passed away in 1899, he left behind a wooden trunk, which eventually passed through his descendants. Inside that trunk was something that must’ve seemed pretty mundane to Warner himself: A pair of 44-37 Levi’s jeans made in 1893, according to the New York Post.

Currently in the possession of Warner’s great-great-grandson, Jock Taylor, those jeans are now thought to be the oldest unworn pair of Levi’s on the planet. As of 2017, Levi’s offered Taylor $50,000 for the denim trousers, but the lucky benefactor held out for a better offer. According to the Seattle Times, the jeans were purchased for $100,000 in 2018.

Givaga / Getty Images/iStockphoto
Givaga / Getty Images/iStockphoto

From Zero To Billions

Inheritance: About $5.52 billion

In 2009, Zsolt and Geza Peladi were two homeless brothers living in a cave in Hungary, despite the fact that they were the grandchildren of an extremely wealthy German woman. By German law, when the woman passed away in December 2009, her direct descendants inherited her estate, according to The Telegraph.

Because the grandma’s daughter was deceased, her assets went to her estranged Hungarian grandchildren and a sister living in the United States. With the bulk of an estate valued at roughly $5.52 billion suddenly left to them, the trio surely made out just fine no matter how the money was divided.

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fstop123 / Getty Images

Valmai Roche’s Final Insult

Inheritance: About $4.50

When Lady Mayoress and Australian socialite Valmai Roche died in 2009, she left behind an estate valued at $3.5 million. Given her wealth, the amount wasn’t strange, but the (virtually) sole benefactor — a Catholic organization called Knights of the Southern Cross — was, according to The Telegraph.

Mrs. Roche’s two daughters and her ex-husband all received, according to the words of Valmai’s last will and testament, “30 pieces of silver of the lowest denomination of currency,” a pittance of “blood money due to Judas” amounting to about $1.50 a pop. Neither daughter opened up a beneficiary account for the occasion, though they finally managed to wrest control of the estate by order of the Australian Supreme Court in late 2012.

Mark Johnson / iStock.com
Mark Johnson / iStock.com

The Legend of John B.’s Gold

Inheritance: 148 acres of land and, potentially, buried treasure

The “S-Town” podcast — which delved into the life of reclusive Alabamian genius, metallurgist and horologist John B. McLemore — attracted more than 16 million downloads within a week after it was released in March of 2017. Many listeners are still curious as to how John B.’s inheritance will pan out.

Although cousin Reta Lawrence got all 148 acres of McLemore’s land in Woodstock, Alabama when he committed suicide by cyanide, family friend and tattoo artist Tyler Goodson claims to be the rightful heir to the estate via verbal contract. If the story doesn’t already prove that reality is stranger than fiction, there’s more — no one has yet found the literal buried gold that McLemore was rumored to have hidden on his land, though legal battles still rage on.

Speaking of legal battles, “S-Town” was later sued by the estate of John B. McLemore in July 2018. According to CBS, the lawsuit lasted two years in court and was dismissed in 2020 after the two sides involved reached a settlement.

Instants / Getty Images
Instants / Getty Images

Bad Feng Shui for Nina Wang

Inheritance: About $10.6 billion

At the time of her death in 2007, property developer and Chinachem owner Nina Wang was the richest woman in Asia. Per her will, Wang’s multi-billion-dollar fortune went to charity, but her feng shui consultant, Tony Chan, had other plans.

Upon Ms. Wang’s death, Chan miraculously produced another document that bequeathed her entire estate to him, according to The Wall Street Journal. In 2013, Hong Kong courts found Chan guilty of forging the will and slapped him with 12 years behind bars. Apparently, Chan didn’t like the feng shui in prison — he filed (and failed) an appeal application in 2015.

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ppengcreative / Getty Images/iStockphoto

The Generous Janitor

Inheritance: $6 million

The saying goes that the meek shall inherit the earth, but sometimes, the community inherits a whole lot from the meek. In life, Brattleboro, Vermont janitor Ronald Reed tooled around town in his secondhand Toyota and chopped wood for fun; in death, Reed left a shocking $4.8 million to a local hospital and $1.2 million to Brattleboro’s Brooks Memorial Library, according to “Today.”

So how did Reed do it? Smart stock investments added up to about $8 million by the time he passed.

Tom Payne / Shutterstock.com
Tom Payne / Shutterstock.com

Phone Book Heirs

Inheritance: One 12-room apartment in Lisbon, one house in Guimaraes, two motorcycles, one luxury car and roughly $32,000

Luis Carlos de Noronha Cabral da Camara of Portugal died young, drunk and alone. The illegitimate son of a local aristocrat, Luis’ material life was secure from birth, but by the time he died in 2007 at age 42, he was unmarried and childless with a sardonic sense of humor, according to The Guardian.

The executor of the will, Luis Carlos’ lawyer, reported that the late motorcycle enthusiast simply picked 70 names from the phone book to inherit his wealth upon passing. Lonely or not, when your death benefits your heirs, maybe you lived a worthwhile life after all.

clu / Getty Images/iStockphoto
clu / Getty Images/iStockphoto

No Women Allowed

Inheritance: $50,000

If you could apply a feminist barometer like the Bechdel Test to the life and will of Iowa lawyer, T.M. Zink, he would fail it spectacularly. Rather than leaving his family a monetary gift upon his passing in 1930, Zink decided to leave behind a whole lot of misogyny, reported The Guardian.

Zink put $50,000 in a trust for 75 years, requesting that it eventually go the construction of the “no-women-admitted” Zink Womanless Library. Fortunately for the state of Iowa, family members made sure that library remained just a dream of the man who personally claimed an “intense hatred of women.” So much for widow’s benefits.

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fizkes / iStock.com
fizkes / iStock.com

Wait, Who Died?

Inheritance: About $278,000

Some people win the lottery. Others, like English retiree John Hall, find out that they’re the distant relative and heir to a mysterious widow.

In 2015, Hall found himself heir to a relative he never knew — the childless, sibling-less and intestate Shirley Diane Street of Kent, according to Metro. When Finders International contacted him with the news, Hall gained a branch on his family tree and a sweet £200,000 — or about $278,000 U.S. dollars — out of the blue.

James F clay / Flickr.com
James F clay / Flickr.com

Shakespeare’s Second-Best Bed

Inheritance: One bed

In 1616, the last will and testament of William Shakespeare only mentioned his wife, Anne Hathaway, once. Will’s will states that Anne was to receive the “second best bed with the furniture,” meaning its valance, linens and accessories, according to Shakespeare Documented.

For over 400 years, this seemingly scandalous slight added fuel to the fiery rumors of Shakespeare’s affair, but in 2016, “Shakespeare’s Marriage” author Lena Cowen Orlin doused the drama, noting that “second-best” was just a 1600s descriptor and wouldn’t have been seen as offensive at the time.

londoneye / Getty Images/iStockphoto
londoneye / Getty Images/iStockphoto

Dad Knows Best

Inheritance: $37 million

As a millionaire real estate mogul, it wasn’t too odd for New Yorker Maurice Laboz to leave each of his daughters about $10 million when he died in 2015. But the stipulations tied to that inheritance money were more than a little esoteric.

The two youngest Laboz daughters won’t get their cut until they turn 35, but that’s not all — they each have to attend an accredited university, marry well-positioned men who legally swear not to touch their inheritance money, stay employed and not have any children out of wedlock.

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W. Scott McGill / Shutterstock.com
W. Scott McGill / Shutterstock.com

Bullseye in North Carolina

Inheritance: Nearly 250,000 Native American arrowheads

Most benefactors prefer to inherit cash, but caretaker Jerry Williams of North Carolina ended up with a massive collection of Native American arrowheads dating back as far as 12,000 years, when a couple of friends and collectors under his care passed away in 1987, according to Fox Business.

The collection left behind by Moon and Irene Mullins is one of the most impressive in history — so impressive that even John Wayne himself was unsuccessful in his attempt to buy it. Ten years after inheriting the lot, Williams made a deal with Wayne Underwood, who would display the arrowheads at his roadside museum and give Williams and his wife $1 for every ticket sold as long as Williams lives. As of 2018, the couple racked up almost $400,000 from the deal.

Heather Taylor contributed to the reporting for this piece.

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