-Estate Planning
Our family package includes a Living Trust, Wills, Durable Powers of Attorneys and Advance Health Care Directives drafted according to your wishes. It includes two meetings with an attorney, one real property deed transfer and free notarization. We can also prepare estate planning documents a la carte depending on your immediate needs.
We can assist you with trust administration for a loved one's revocable or irrevocable trust upon his or her death. We can also help you transition your estate planning documents if your spouse has passed away. There are many things that should be done and having our guidance on your side can make the process even easier.
Probate
We can help you with your probate matters and other asset transfers upon the death of your loved one.
Suze Orman Says Get a Living Trust
In O Magazine (O for Oprah), Suze Orman gives excellent financial advice each month. This month she addressed Financial 'I Dos' and Don'ts and explained how a Living Trust can help blended families with their estate planning.
A reader wrote a question about being "remarried for two years ... how can I protect my children's right to inherit what's mine?"
Suze's answer was, "First, set up a revocable living trust that spells out how you want your property disbursed at your death. " She went on to explain how living trusts work and how it can be beneficial in a blended family.
Remember, whatever assets you bring into a marriage are considered your separate property assets so long as you keep them separate. These separate property assets can be devised to someone other than your spouse like your kids.
So set up a Living Trust for these separate property assets. And set up another Living Trust for your community property assets.
That said, if you have more wealth that you think a Living Trust isn't enough or suitable for you, talk to an estate planning attorney to explore advanced estate planning options.
Revocable Living Trusts and other estate planning documents can be attacked on three basic grounds:
1. Undue influence
2. Lack of formality
3. Lack of capacity
Undue influence refers to whether someone unduly influenced the person who created the trust in some fashion.
Lack of formality deals with the structure of the document itself. Was it properly prepared, notarized, etc.?
Lack of capacity is whether the person had a basic knowledge and understanding of the trust, knew what they were signing and knew the objects of their bounty among other factors.
Sure, I am explaining this at the simplest level, but you get the idea. So, don't accompany your mother to her lawyer's office, ask the lawyer to draft a trust giving you everything omitting your sisters and taking the document home and making handwritten changes on it. You'd be well on your way to a nice contest.
NO CONTEST CLAUSES
Trust litigation appears to be the new era.
I was at a seminar in today where the featured attorney spoke solely about no contest clauses. He started his presentation by stating that trust litigation was the last bastion to be kept safe from the reaches of litigation attorneys. He felt that the flood gates has opened with respects to trust litigation.
And so it began his discussion of no contest clauses. He said the following in a nice nutshell that I jotted down to pass along:
1. Don't cut anyone out completely. Even if you hate them, you'd hate them even more if they successfully contested your trust or other estate plan. I agree. Give them a gift.
2. All trust amendments must contain another no contest clause so that the existing no contest clause in the trust also applies to the amendment.
3. Protect collateral documents that are a part of your estate plan by including those in your no contest clause.
4. Mention the troublesome beneficiaries in your trust so the court can ascertain your intent and why you are cutting them off.
5. Make your intent clear as a settlor or the person who created the trust. Videos, letters, etc. can help your successor trustee fight your trust in court after you pass away.
6. Be creative with your no contest clause. Creativity can make it easier to enforce as the court will likely have never seen the language before and may rule in your favor especially if you are foreseeing a trust contest.
Don't be too alarmed though. Most families are pretty happy. Most parents want to leave everything to each of their children equally. If this is your case, there is no reason to have anything other than a straightforward no contest clause. But if you are concerned, talk to your attorney and make sure your attorney understands the issues.
You will want to set up a Living Trust to name a successor trustee to privately manage your minor children's money in the event both mom and dad pass away before the kids are old enough to manage an inheritance. This is doubly important if you have a child from a previous relationship. I am almost positive that you would not want your former spouse/lover to handle your child's money until he or she turns of age and would rather choose someone closer to you to manage such an inheritance instead.
In a Living Trust, you control what happens to your children's inheritance.
You nominate individuals or corporations to serve as the money manager (successor trustee). You state the provisions important to you for monetary distributions. You select whether they should be mandatory or discretionary with respects to income and principal. You guide how the money should be distributed.
You also state how long the funds are held in trust. You decide at what age your child must reach before the trust can be terminated and the remainder of the funds (corpus) can be distributed.
My recommendation if you have very young children is to keep your trust provisions very broad and tighten them as your children grow older once you have a sense of what kind of individuals they are. My personal philosophy is that it is easier to restrict a trust than to make it less restrictive as time goes on.
Every Living Trust needs a successor trustee to continue to manage the assets in there when you pass away.
If you have many kids, say more than two, consider not naming any of your children as successor trustees. Name a trusted financial advisor, name a life-long friend, name another relative or name a corporate trustee to manage the trust to ensure that your wishes will be carried out.
Trusts contests are rarer than Will contests. I think it is mostly because Living Trusts are much more private and harder to get ahold of. Wills are public documents once probate is opened. So anyone can see your Will at that point. But a Living Trust and the fact it exists can be harder for people to see/find. Also, people think that a Living Trust cannot be contested. It can be, but there are laws to follow.
Anyway, I was reviewing a Living Trust for a potential contest this morning. It was quite amazing as the person who passed away had 9 children. The person died over 10 years ago leaving two homes. The person named a daughter to act as successor trustee. Not an iota has been distributed to any of the 9 children or other beneficiaries named in the Living Trust since the person died. The two homes are still in the trust, but the successor trustee was using the homes for other purposes. After a little research, I also noted that the "attorney" who prepared the trust and was supposedly assisting the successor trustee with routine trust administration was, in fact, disbarred. Meaning he's not an attorney licensed to practice law in .
Nice mess.
I see this ad in my local newspaper all the time. Living Trusts and then a ridiculously low price... like $400. Be careful. This is for a Living Trust. Period.
That's it.
Nothing else.
No Certification of Trust, no pour-over Will, no Durable Power of Attorney, no Advance Health Care Directive, no deed transfer, no review of your assets, no binder, no notarization of all documents.
They don't even copy the signed/executed documents for their own files in case you misplace the originals. I had to call one of those places two weeks ago to see if they had a copy of a certain document that my client was sure was prepared by that office. The other documents were prepared by that office, but they didn't keep copies.
Furthermore, if you only have a Living Trust prepared, do not be fooled that you have completed your estate planning.
A Durable Power of Attorney and Advance Health Care Directives are very important. These two documents allow your loved ones to help manage your affairs along with what's in your Living Trust if are not aging well and find that you need assistance.
A Living Trust May Avoid a Conservatorship.
A Living Trust can be used to hold title to your real property. Also, in a Living Trust, you appoint a Successor Trustee to manage your Living Trust in the event you are unable to do so by reason of death, incapacity or personal choice.
If you become incapacitated, your Successor Trustee will be able to privately manage your assets in your Living Trust in accordance with your instructions you have provided in the Living Trust.
Thus, a properly prepared and funded Trust can enable you to avoid a conservatorship proceeding over your estate. Compared with the cost of a conservatorship proceeding, a Trust can be very attractive.
Sounds so simple, you know.
A conservatorship is a guardian over an adult. It is very costly and time-consuming. It can also be very scary to the individual placed in the conservatorship. You become a conservatee and lose control over your assets.
But if you have the your largest asset, your home, in your Living Trust then it can be managed by your chosen loved one. Also, if you have a Durable Power of Attorney in Place and Advance Health Care Directive -- all potential reasons to obtain a conservatorship will have been addressed.
Estate planning is truly important.
Cross References:
For more information about conservatorships, read the Guardians for Profit series reported by the Los Angeles Times.
Tax Implications of a Living Trust.
All things involving taxes and your Living Trust. A rambling of thoughts...
1. A Living Trust will not protect your assets from creditors. So if you owe the IRS money, they can attach assets in your Living Trust.
2. does not have inheritance tax so your beneficiaries who inherit from your Living Trust will owe no taxes.
3. If your total estate is less than the Federal Tax Exemption, which is at $2million for 2006, no federal estate taxes will be owed by your estate after you pass away. So, in other words, your estate may very well pass tax free to your beneficiaries.
4. Your Living Trust beneficiaries will also receive the new stepped-up basis of market value of any real property and stocks in your Living Trust. This means that the real property and stocks will be valued at the day you pass away rather than the day you acquired them for capital gain taxes.
5. If your Living Trust contains real property in which you are giving to your children, they will have the same property tax basis as you so long as they apply for the parent-to-child exclusion for reassessment in property taxes. This must be done within 3 years of the transfer from the Living Trust to your child. This means that your children will not face an increase in property taxes on your property when they inherit it.
Living Trusts are Private Documents Not Subject to Public Scrutiny.
A properly created and funded Living Trust is a private document not subject to public access.
A Will, on the other hand, is lodged with the court after death to open probate proceedings. This means that anyone can go to the court clerk and ask to see your Will because it is a part of public probate proceedings.
If you want to keep your financial affairs and your estate out of public eyes, a Trust is your best option.
Why does it matter?
Well, you may want to keep private that you are not leaving anything to your second spouse or that you are leaving everything to your kids except that they must be 40 to receive their final distribution. Or that if you have a special needs child and his or her provisions are decidedly different from your other children. Certainly, no one else needs to know any of this. Only your attorney and your successor trustees need to know these kinds of things.
Many clients erroneously think that a Living Trust offers asset protection from taxes, creditors and others. In short, a Living Trust does not provide any form of asset protection.
This is because a Living Trust is revocable by the person who created it (the settlor). When such a trust is revocable, the assets held by the Living Trust are treated as if the settlor owned them, (which they do). You cannot hide what you own.
Asset protection can be had by other means including, but not limited to creating a Family Limited Partnership or LLC and having a trust hold an interest therein. Too much for this post.
What to do?
What I find that for many clients who inquire about asset protection is that obtaining an umbrella liability insurance policy will give them the added liability protection they seek. Here is a quick explanation about umbrella policies from about.com.
So who should get an umbrella liability insurance policy? Anyone who is worried about getting sued, who has a swimming pool, who has teenage drivers or who owns rental properties to name a few good situations to consider getting such a policy.
An umbrella liability insurance can be obtained from your insurance provider if you already have your home and auto insurance coverage with them. You can gain an extra 1 to 5 million dollars in coverage above and beyond your existing policy limits.
Contact your insurance agent for more information. [It boggles my mind why more insurance agents do not educate their clients about this type of policy or suggest it as part of an annual review of your insurance needs.]
Keywords: estate trust contest probate paralegal