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Executor Refuses To Release Grandma’s College Fund To Niece After She Fails To Meet GPA Requirement

by Leona Pham
February 4, 2026
in Social Issues

Money has a strange way of turning family disagreements into full-scale wars, especially when expectations and promises get mixed.

What starts as a legal responsibility can quickly become a personal conflict when emotions, resentment, and old grudges resurface. Add inheritance into the mix, and suddenly every decision feels like a moral test.

The OP found himself in that exact position after being named executor of his grandmother’s estate. Her wishes were clear, but not everyone was happy with them. When a younger family member asked for access to money meant for education, things spiraled fast.

Accusations started flying, jokes turned into pressure tactics, and the OP was painted as the villain for refusing to bend the rules. Now he is questioning whether standing firm makes him heartless or responsible. Scroll down to see what led to this standoff.

A young executor refused to release college money that didn’t meet his grandmother’s rules

Executor Refuses To Release Grandma’s College Fund To Niece After She Fails To Meet GPA Requirement

AITA for not allowing my niece to use "promised" money from my grandma's estate to go to college? My family is derisively calling me "Scott's Tots" in order to get...

So how do I begin with this.

I am 26 and shortly before my grandma died last year she changed me to the executor of her estate.

My grandma became enraged (rightly or wrongly) at my mom, aunts

and uncle and basically at the 11th hour rewrote her considerable estate

go to my generation (myself, sister and cousins)

and one great grandkid (who I call niece

because I truly don't understand all the "removed" stuff) so split evenly 6 ways.

The condition was if the person was not through college,

their share had to be spent on education first,

otherwise I would keep it in a trust until they turned 27.

The stipulation was as well that the person had to have a 3.5 gpa to get it for school,

if not they had to get their grades up or wait until 27 (I really hope this is making sense).

Basically under no circumstances do any of the cousins

or great grand kid not get their money or do I get to keep it long term.

My cousin and her daughter (niece to me) came asking me for the money

so she can make payments to University of Arizona so she can start next week.

Either they didn't know or didn't care about the GPA requirement

because when I asked to see her report card from her last semester

it showed me she all but failed her last semester.

I don't even know how she graduated because she had something like a 1.2 GPA.

I asked her how she got into UofA and she said she didn't really know or care,

she just was ready to get to school to party.

I basically said no, that this was not even remotely the stipulations of my Grandma's will

and that I will be happy to give her the money

for the spring semester if she gets her grades up to a 3.5 this fall.

That's when all hell broke loose.

My mom, aunts and uncle already see me as a target

because they are resentful of being written out of the will.

My sister and one cousin are fine because they've already gotten their share

but my other 2 cousins and niece have started circulating emails

that I'm running my own version of "Scott's Tots"

because I taking away money that was promised for education.

There's also an undertone that I'm keeping the other 3 peoples money

so I can save it for myself if they don't go to college.

No amount of explanation is helping.

I've tried to tell them that under no circumstances can I keep their shares.

IF they don't go to school, they get the money when they turn 27, no questions asked.

No one wants to hear this from me

and everyone wants me to give my niece the money independent of her grades

(and I imagine my other two cousins will see this as precedent

so they get their money well before they turn 27).

There is really nothing stopping me from doing it.

I write all the checks from the trust

and while it may not be in line with the will, no one is really going to question what I'm doing.

I have to admit all the pressure is getting to me,

especially the Scott's Tots thing because I don't want to be seen like that..

Would I be the a__hole if I withhold my niece's money for school until she gets her grades up?

Edit: just for my own notes since I’m saving this thread and I guess if might help other people be clear..

Cousin A (nieces mom), 38: paid..

Cousin/sister J, 32: paid.. Me: paid. Cousin B, 25: not paid..

Cousin J2, 20: in school.. Niece K, 18: not paid (subject of post)..

A, B and K are the ones causing all the issues and calling me 30 times a day.

Edit: for all the people asking, Scott's Tots is an episode of the The Office,

the plot is Michael made a promise to a group of grade schoolers that he'd pay for thier college.

He assumed he'd be a multi millionaire in 10 years when it came time to pay off.

The episode centers around him telling the now graduating kids he can't pay for college.

I've seen it called the "best unwatchable episode of TV ever" because it's so cringe worthy.

I've watched the office 8 times and I skip this episode, it's so painful to watch.

Parks n' Rec is a better show though...fight me.

There is a particular kind of discomfort that comes from being placed in charge of other people’s expectations. It happens when responsibility collides with guilt, and suddenly doing the right thing feels lonelier than doing the easy thing.

Many people recognize that sinking feeling of being pressured to bend, not because they are wrong, but because others are unhappy with reality.

In this story, the OP was not deciding whether to be generous or cruel. He was standing at the intersection of duty, family resentment, and moral clarity. As the executor of his grandmother’s estate, he inherited more than paperwork.

He inherited unresolved family anger, entitlement, and suspicion. His niece’s request was emotionally loaded, framed as a broken promise rather than a conditional opportunity.

The pressure intensified because the people criticizing him were already wounded by being excluded from the will. Their frustration was redirected toward the one person enforcing boundaries, turning him into a convenient villain.

A fresh way to view the OP’s actions is to see them not as withholding, but as resisting emotional blackmail disguised as humor. The “Scott’s Tots” comparison was not accidental. It was designed to shame him into compliance by associating him with public humiliation and broken promises.

Psychologically, this tactic works because humans are deeply motivated to avoid social rejection. What looks like stubbornness from the outside is often quiet self-control on the inside, especially when someone refuses to trade integrity for approval. The OP was not denying education. He was insisting that accountability exists before reward.

Bruce Y. Lee, M.D., M.B.A., a physician and writer for Psychology Today, explains that guilt-tripping is a manipulative tactic designed to make someone feel more responsible, ashamed, or morally at fault than the situation actually warrants.

In his analysis, Lee notes that guilt-trippers often distort facts, exaggerate consequences, or reframe events to pressure others into compliance. This behavior can leave the target anxious, confused, and doubting their own judgment, even when they are acting reasonably.

Lee emphasizes that guilt-tripping is not about fairness or accountability, but about control. Recognizing these tactics is critical because repeatedly giving in to guilt-based pressure can erode boundaries and reinforce unhealthy relational dynamics.

Applied to this situation, the OP’s family was not reacting to the rules themselves, but to what those rules symbolized. Accepting the GPA requirement would mean confronting uncomfortable truths about effort, responsibility, and past assumptions.

By holding firm, the OP honored his grandmother’s intent and protected himself from future accusations of favoritism or misuse.

A realistic path forward is not giving in, but removing himself from the emotional crossfire, possibly by transferring administration to a third party. Sometimes the most ethical choice is also the least popular, and learning to tolerate that discomfort is part of adulthood.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

These Redditors stressed legal duty and fiduciary responsibility

Artisgreat01 − You might find it easier to get a third party to run the trust as it removes these ‘personal’ issues.

Lunaticllama14 − If you intentionally disregard the terms of the will (that turned into the terms of the trust),

you could be held liable for breach of your fiduciary duty as trustee/executor.

If it makes it any easier, I would pay a lawyer a small consultation fee to review everything

and provide her professional opinion on such a distribution in letter form.

If you send your family such a letter you will be very well protected legally.

I would also suggest having a third party wealth management firm manage the undistributed trust money

to insulate yourself from any accusations of foul play.

lost-cannuck − NTA - you are executing the will as your grandmother wrote it.

Just because you are administering the plan

doesn't mean you can change the stipulations as you are bound by the will.

You can inform them you are doing your legal duty but if they wish to continue,

you would happily put it into a publicly managed trust

that would charge money to ensure the terms are met as written.

This group backed enforcing the will exactly as written

wigglebuttbiscuits − NTA. Your grandma’s wishes were clear and she obviously knew her family well enough

to know this was a smart idea. Hold firm and carry out her will as written.

StockyBear − NTA Do not give in. Your family is acting like a bunch of dickheads, all over some money.

It's not their decision, and really, it's not yours either. You are the executor of the money.

It was passed on with certain stipulations, and you agreed to them

when you took on the role of the executor. Stick to your guns, and don't cave.

inevitablegirlie − NTA. I may need to rewatch the Scott's Tots episode, though.

I forget the part where none of the kids had actually met the stated academic requirements

to get the scholarship Michael promised them.

These commenters suggested hiring a lawyer or third-party trustee

SineWave48 − NTA. It’s clear why your grandmother chose you to be executor of her will.

I’ve never heard of Scott’s Tots but I assume that’s not particularly relevant?

But if the pressure is getting to you, then use a small portion of the estate

to employ a reputable lawyer to take over as executor of the will.

Or even just set an individual trust up for your ‘niece’.

The trustee should be bound to follow the directions in the will. You will no longer have control.

She will have a lawyer to confirm that she will definitely see the money one day,

but she will be paying the associated costs out of her inheritance

so the precedent your other cousins now see is that they can choose

between trusting you, or losing some of the cash.

If I were you though I think I’d just go with appointing a lawyer for the lot make it not my problem anymore.

EDIT: If this is a large sum of money, then go with a big law firm, to whom it is actually a small amount of money.

CrusadeAgainstStupid − NTA - though I do think you should add

that you'll reimburse the money from the first semester as long as the grades are met.

It seems reasonable to me that any semester where the grade stipulation is met should be paid for by the trust.

You might want to talk to a lawyer about it though.

This wouldn't be the first time that family sued other family over something they perceived as inequitable or unfair.

This commenter questioned the GPA rule but agreed it clearly wasn’t met

ElsaClack − NTA But damn, Grandma? ! A 3.5? That’s pretty steep especially

if they do something difficult like computer science or go to an extremely strict school

where a b might = an a somewhere else.

But if your niece is at a 1.something, it isn’t even close.

I could see them arguing if she had a 3.0 maybe. I personally would get a lawyer.

Many readers felt the executor wasn’t withholding opportunity; he was honoring intent. Others admitted the social pressure was intense enough to make anyone second-guess themselves.

So what do you think? Is sticking to a will’s conditions an act of fairness or inflexibility? Would you bend the rules to keep family peace, or let the chips fall where they may? Share your thoughts, because inheritance drama never stays quiet for long.

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 2/2 votes | 100%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/2 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/2 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/2 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/2 votes | 0%

Leona Pham

Leona Pham

Hi, I'm Leona. I'm a writer for Daily Highlight and have had my work published in a variety of other media outlets. I'm also a New York-based author, and am always interested in new opportunities to share my work with the world. When I'm not writing, I enjoy spending time with my family and friends. Thanks for reading!

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