Estate Tax
Read below for the best way NOT to do your estate planning and will!
Call or E-Mail for some solutions on doing it the right way!
Done correctly your assets can be left in such a way that they are:
- Creditor Protected!
- Divorce Protected!
- Bankruptcy Protected!
- Estate Tax Protected
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Leave Your Heirs a Lawsuit?
One wants to sell; the other wants to live there.
Most state law law provides any co-owner with the right to force a sale of a property by a "partition" lawsuit. [Even a 1% owner can force a sale of the whole property.] This legal right may be waived only in writing.
We said, "If Mom had planned it right, this lawsuit ... could have been prevented." How?
- Mom could have appointed one child to determine when to sell the property.
"I leave the house to R and B equally, to hold the house until R decides it should be sold."
- Mom could have specified that the property could be sold only if both children agreed.
"I leave the house to R and B equally, to be sold when they both agree it should be sold."
- Mom could have appointed a tie-breaker to make decisions if her children could not reach a majority agreement.
"I leave the house to R and B equally; if they cannot agree on the management of the house, Uncle Bob shall decide."
By leaving the house to both children with no further guidance, Mom left them the house AND a lawsuit; now, they will never talk to each other ever again. Not exactly what Mom wanted.
Caution: restrictions on sale can backfire: a New York City family still owns the world's best buggy whip company; great-grandpa instructed: "Don't ever sell the company."
If a client wants to limit a sale, we prefer to allow some flexibility, such as, "Don't sell unless X, Y, and Z unanimously agree."
Estate Planning - An Heir's View
Fact of life: we all die. We all know it. We all fight it. But it's inevitable.
Why do we do estate planning? For our children or our other heirs.
Estate planning does no good for us. If my Will simply leaves everything to my wife, at my death a simple Probate (total cost = $750+/-) gives her full ownership of everything we own, with no death taxes. At her later death, before our kids inherit, a full Probate often takes a year or more, costs lots of lawyer's fees, and only $6250,000 is tax free.
Basic estate planning helps not me, not my wife, but my children. It allows $1,200,000 tax free, with no Probate and only a slight delay. Using more sophisticated estate planning allows the kids to get more, tax free.
It is important to remember why we do estate planning - it's not for us but for our heirs.
If you do not like your heirs, don't do estate planning. If you like your heirs, do them a favor and do it right.
Some day (hopefully not too soon) we may be heirs ourselves. To make the transition easier for ourselves, we should discuss with our parents whether they have made plans to simplify our work and reduce the cost as much as possible for their inevitable deaths.
As a Certified Specialist Estate Planner, I talk with clients all week about their own deaths. However, I know how difficult it is to speak with my own family about this topic. Besides being a difficult topic, a child who brings this up with his parents may appear greedy, self-interested, or ghoulish. But doing it right ahead of time makes a huge difference, for 2 reasons.
First, a basic Living Trust should allow Probate avoidance at each death; allow the surviving parent full use of 100% of their assets after the first death; and allow each Parent to leave $625,000 tax free (with no property tax reassessment).
The second reason is that asset protection can be built into an inheritance, if it is done ahead of time. [Asset protection is difficult to achieve with your own assets, but a properly structured inheritance can protect against lawsuits, divorce, and taxes.]
See a "how to" use of Personal Residence Trust
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