Tuesday, July 26, 2016

Worry

Not having a plan in place to protect your assets and family puts you and your family at risk!

Having no protection plan can make the future uncertain.  Uncertainty leads to worry.

And, worry can keep you up at night.  You can spend hours lying in bed wondering if your family will be okay during your lifetime and beyond.

The problem with losing so much sleep is that during the day you just can’t think straight.  You don’t have the mental energy to deal with day to day activities, not to mention creating your plan.

Plus, studies have shown that not getting enough sleep can affect your mental and physical health with ailments such as high blood pressure, heart disease, and stroke.  Lack of sleep can cause accidents.

Are you going to keep worrying?

Are you going to keep laying up at night?

Or have the peace of mind by putting your plan in your place?  Losing sleep is just going to make you more tired and less able to deal with your family effectively.  You don’t want to take the chance of affecting your health with a lack of sleep.

Let me help you.  I can show you how to stop worrying, and create a custom plan just for you and your family that protects you and your family during your lifetime and beyond.

Click here to set aside 15 to 30 minutes to chat, no obligations. 

Take care of this quickly and easily so you can get your sleep back, stop being tired, enjoy life more, and stop worrying about it.

Know that you and your family are protected.

PS:  You can do something now to stop worrying about the future.  Click here to set aside 15 to 30 minutes to chat without obligation.

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Wednesday, July 20, 2016

Wills for Estate Planning

A Will is the primary tool of the probate system. Your Will is like a letter to the Court telling the Court how you want your property distributed.  Then you must make sure that you prove to the Court that all your property is collected and appraised, and all your bills and taxes are paid, before your property can be distributed to your heirs.

In Arkansas, the administration usually takes 6 to 18 months.  During this time, the deceased person’s property must be inventoried and appraised.  Heirs must be notified.  Estate and inheritance taxes, if any, must be paid.  Contested claims, if any, must be settled.  Creditors must be notified and paid.  If all of this is not done before the estate is distributed to the beneficiaries of the estate, the personal representative will be personally responsible for those claims.  As a result, most personal representatives won’t distribute property until they are sure all claims have been settled.

Because probate is a public legal proceeding, your estate may become a matter of public record.  This means that anyone — including nosy neighbors and salespeople — can go to Court to find out the balance in your savings account, the value of your stocks, even the appraised value of your diamonds.



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Will Preparation and Will Drafting

First: A Will is a COMPLEX WRITING

All the normal people are fighting to discover how to write a will.

However, this presents a unique opportunity for the smart planner like you.

The government usually has a plan in place if you don’t.

However, by writing a will, your plan takes over.  Your goods go where you want them to go (with certain limits).

A Will has many components that must be done in order for the will to

  1. Not be challenged easily
  2. Be valid
  3. Revoke all prior wills
  4. Disinherit children and heirs properly
  5. Be properly signed (in a signing ceremony)

These are only a few of the things you need to know.  Only a professional estate planning attorney knows all of the ins and outs of a will.

Second: A handwritten (holographic) will is valid in Arkansas

You can write your will out longhand. At probate time though, it may take the testimony of three credible witnesses, who are not mentioned in the will, to validate the handwriting and signature. (Arkansas Code Annotated § 28-25-104).

However, it is not recommended by me, except in emergency situations, that a person writes their own will without knowing all of the pieces that are needed and how real estate is handed down properly.

Third: Introduction

The introduction to a Will must

  1. Declare that it is the last Will and Testament
  2. Declare that all past wills and codicils are not valid, in the right language

Fourth: Leaving Gifts other than Real Estate

It is best to just make a list of what you want to go to whom and not attach conditions.  When you start to attach conditions to gifts, it muddies the water.  By leaving gifts with conditions, it opens the will up to challenges.  And, the more vague the condition, the more likely challenges are.

Fifth: Leaving Gifts of Real Estate

It is best to just give gifts of real estate outright to the person you want to have them. When you start adding conditions you may run into a thing called the “Rule Against Perpetuities.” It is a complex rule that can cause the real estate to not go to the person you intended.  And, like above, the more conditions you put on something, the more likely a challenge against the will.

Sixth:  Disinheriting children or skipping a generation

If you have children that have either made it on their own, or you just don’t want to leave anything to, that is your right.  Just remember, to disinherit or skip a child:

  • The child must be mentioned in the will
  • You should explicitly state that they receive no gift, or that they get $1.00

Seventh: The no compete clause

It is very important to have a no compete (in terrorem) clause in your will.  Basically, if somebody challenges the will and doesn’t win, then they won’t take under the will.  This paragraph needs to be specifically crafted.

Eighth: Disinheriting a spouse

Don’t even try to disinherit your spouse.  The spouse can make a, usually valid, claim against the will for about 1/3 (in Arkansas).

Ninth: Signatures, Self affirming affidavits, and Witnesses

Of course, a will requires your signature.  And it requires the signature of “disinterested” witnesses.  Disinterested witnesses are those that are not mentioned in the will.  They will not gain anything because of the will.  During probate, the witnesses may have be called to validate your signature, unless…

You have added a self affirming affidavit to the will, by which the witnesses swear they saw you sign, and it is your signature.  This affidavit takes the place of calling the witnesses in probate proceedings.

Tenth: Capacity

Of course, since you are reading this, you should have the needed mental capacity.  To create a will, it does not take much mental fortitude.  A person must simply be aware of what they have and who they want to give it to.

Eleventh: The rest and residue clause

I almost forgot one of the most important parts of a will…  This part of the will tells who everything you have not specifically given away goes to.

This article has just touched on the basics of writing your own will. There is so much more to know to write a good will. If you also add in a trust, then it just gets more complicated.



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Last Will and Testament

What is a Last Will and Testament?

A Last Will and Testament is instructions on how to pay the final expenses, who should take care of wrapping everything up, and who gets your stuff.

A Last Will and Testament is only one of the many estate documents of a complete estate plan. If you die without a will or trust, you are said to have died “intestate.” The state will determine who gets what in that case. You really want to put your plan in place of the default state plan.

A Last Will and Testament is a COMPLEX WRITING

All the normal people are fighting to discover how to write a will.

However, this presents a unique opportunity for the smart planner like you.

The government usually has a plan in place if you don’t.

However, by writing a will, your plan takes over.  Your goods go where you want them to go (with certain limits).

A Last Will and Testament has many components that must be done in order for the will to

  1. Not be challenged easily
  2. Be valid
  3. Revoke all prior wills
  4. Disinherit children and heirs properly
  5. Be properly signed (in a signing ceremony)


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Wills

Wills are just one tool in the planning toolbox.  It is usually the first thing people think about when you say “estate planning.”  In its simplest terms, a Will is a list of gifts and some very basic instructions to your loved ones.  However, a lot of formality surrounds the creation and execution of a Last Will and Testament.
Unlike a trust, a Last Will and Testament must go through probate to be validated and the assets distributed. The “testator”, creator of the will, does not get to have long term control over the gifts. Typically, if a trust is involved, the will simply “pours” everything not in the trust into the trust.


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Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Personal and Financial Goals

If you could have anything you want, personally and financially, what would it be?

What are your dreams?

How do you and your spouse want to spend your retirement years?

Without answering these basic questions, you are really wandering aimlessly through life.  Do you want to continue to wander in the desert, or come into the promised land?

Everybody has a vision, their internal plan, for everything in life.  Whether it is family, career, or finances.  Whether conscious or not, the vision is there.

All of these visions form the basis for your estate and life plan.

An estate plan ties all of your other visions and plans together and protects your and your loved one’s future.

Not everyone has the foresight of vision of an estate plan and what it does for a family.



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Saturday, July 16, 2016

Misconception #4

Joint ownership is a good way to avoid probate

It is true that joint ownership with right of survivorship (the most commonly used form of joint ownership) allows the jointly owned asset to transfer automatically to the other joint owner when one owner dies, without probate. However, if both owners die at the same time or if the surviving owner does not add a new joint owner before he/she dies, the asset will have to go through probate before it can go to the heirs. So, in most cases, joint ownership merely postpones probate.



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Tuesday, July 12, 2016

Promise Yourself

Promise yourself that you will get your estate planning done.

Make a personal commitment to yourself and your family that you will do everything possible to protect your family and your assets.

Setting a personal deadline will bring urgency to your planning that you should have.

If you really want a good reason why you should plan, just click here to see this post on how cost-effective planning is.

Now, set that personal deadline.



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Sunday, July 10, 2016

12 Tough Questions to Ask a Lawyer

  1. What’s your opinion of the probate process?
  2. Under what conditions do you recommend a Living Trust?
  3. How do I protect my children from abusive relatives if something happens to me?
  4. Can I keep my kids from controlling their entire inheritance at 18?
  5. How can I protect my children’s money from creditors?
  6. How can I leave money for my child’s education?
  7. How long will it take to set up my Trust?
  8. How many times do I meet with you during the process of preparing my Trust?
  9. What do you charge to set up my Living Trust and what does that fee include?
  10. What do I need to bring with me to our first conference?
  11. If I have more questions after you set up my Trust, may I call you?
  12. Can you send me information about Wills, Living Trusts, and Probate?


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How to Choose a Qualified Lawyer

Tip #1:  Choose an attorney who specializes in estate planning.  Other attorneys simply don’t have the knowledge, skill, judgment or experience to plan your estate properly.

Tip #2:  Choose an attorney you trust.  Nothing is more important in a lawyer/client relationship than having a lawyer you trust.

Tip #3:  Choose an attorney who creates your estate plan himself.  If the attorney has an assistant create your estate plan, then why hire the attorney?  Note, it’s not uncommon for lawyers in solo practice to ask a funding coordinator to transfer property into your trust.  Even so, funding is a fairly routine function and you are well protected as long as the lawyer supervises the process.

Tip #4:  Choose an attorney who provides excellent service.  Anything less is not acceptable.

Tip #5:  Choose an attorney who welcomes your questions — and structures meetings by allowing enough time to answer questions.  High-volume practices have short appointments so they can move clients quickly through the process.  I don’t know about you, but this is not the level of service I expect when I hire a lawyer.

Tip #6:  Choose an attorney who will return your phone calls quickly.  You should never hire a lawyer who won’t respond promptly to your needs.

Tip #7:  Choose an attorney who has roots in the community.  This attorney cares about his reputation and is more likely to be available in the future when you need help.

Tip #8:  Choose an attorney who is a respected source of information — one who has dedicated his practice to helping people understand their estate planning alternatives.

Tip #9:  Choose an attorney who charges fair fees.  At best, you get what you pay for.  Most people do not shop for the cheapest doctor.  Instead, they focus on the doctor’s qualifications and experience.  You should apply the same principle when selecting an estate planning attorney.  If the fee is too low, the lawyer may be leaving something out.  Make sure the fee you pay and the services you receive are of equal value.

Tip #10:  Choose an attorney who offers free initial consultations.  Shouldn’t you be able to talk with the lawyer for free before you decide whether to hire him?

Also, ask specific questions about your estate and your objectives, such as:  “How do I protect my children from abusive relatives if something happens to me?”  “Can I keep my kids from controlling their entire inheritance at age 18?”  “Can I protect my children’s money from creditors?”  “How can I leave money for my child’s education?”



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20 Red Flags

This Estate Planning Checklist identifies events that could make a significant impact on your estate.  If any of these events occurs, please call me.  For your protection, we may need to amend or revise one or more of your estate planning documents.

Changes Involving You or Your Spouse

  1. You get married.
  2. You and your spouse divorce.
  3. Your spouse dies or becomes incapacitated.
  4. Your health changes.

Changes Involving Your Children, Grandchildren or Other Beneficiaries

  1. You have a child.
  2. You adopt a child.
  3. Your child marries.
  4. Your child divorces.
  5. Your child becomes ill.
  6. One of your beneficiaries experiences an economic change, good or bad.
  7. One of your beneficiaries proves to be financially irresponsible.
  8. One of your beneficiaries has a change in attitude toward you.

Changes in Your Economic Condition

  1. The value of your assets increases or decreases.
  2. Your insurability for life insurance changes.
  3. Your employment changes.
  4. Your business interests change, such as becoming involved in a new partner­ship or corpora­tion.
  5. You retire from your business or profession.
  6. You acquire property in a different state.
  7. You move to a different state.

Changes to a Person Named in Your Estate Plan

  1. Something happens to a person named in your estate plan, such as the death or incapac­ity of your personal representative, executor, trustee, guardian or conserva­tor.


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5 Steps to a Competent Asset Protection and Estate Plan

Step #1: Learn how to deal with your incapacity.

Court Supervision.  Our system of laws allows two methods for people to care for you.  One method, Court supervision, has already been chosen for you.  If you make no decisions, the Court will step in and appoint a conservator to handle your financial matters and a guardian for your personal affairs.

Your guardian and conservator carry out the judge’s orders.  It is not likely they will handle things the way you would have handled them.  When the Court steps in, you and your family lose control.

Setting up a guardianship and conservatorship is like other matters involving the Court.  Lawyers represent all parties, including you.  Accountants manage your finances.  Doctors confirm that you need some-one to care for you.

The law requires periodic reports to make sure everyone is looking out for your interests.  What’s more, all these people must be paid for their services.  You bear this expense.

Private Supervision.  Revocable Living Trusts do not require Court supervision.  In your Trust, you decide whom you want to care for you in the event of your mental or physical incapacity.  This usually includes family members or friends.

When you design your plan, you control the outcome because the plan is set up exactly the way you want it.  By setting up a plan that allows for private supervision — with no Court interference — you save a great deal of money and make sure that your wishes are carried out.

Step #2: Choose the method for dealing with your incapacity that is right for you.

Court Supervision.  Advantages:  If you want the Court to dictate the care you receive, dictate how to use your assets, and make decisions for you, then you should use a guardianship and conservatorship.

Disadvantages: You lose control because the judge makes decisions about your care.  Long delays are common.  You pay a high price because guardianships are expensive to set up and maintain.  You lose your privacy because your personal and financial affairs are open to public view.  The emotional strain of reporting everything to the Court takes a toll on you and your family.

Private Supervision through a Revocable Living Trust.  Advantages:  You and the people you select make all the decisions.  You maintain control.  You can make decisions quickly.  You save money because a Revocable Living Trust is less expensive than a guardianship.  You don’t have to involve a variety of lawyers, doctors and accountants.  You maintain your privacy because your documents are not open to the public.  And you reduce stress on your family.  Disadvantages:  Generally, none.

Step #3: Learn how you can distribute property during your lifetime and after your death.

Court Supervision.  The laws of all states are written so if you do nothing to plan your estate, the Court will distribute your property according to the laws of the state where you live.  If you write a Will, and the Court is satisfied that the Will is valid, under the supervision of the Court your property will be distributed according to the terms of your Will.  This process is called probate.

Private Supervision.  You can distribute your property privately, without Court involvement. Your choices consist of the following:

Joint Tenancy With Right of Survivorship:  You should own property in Joint Tenancy only in very rare circumstances.  Review my “8 Dangers of Owning Property in Joint Tenancy” in this handout.

Gifts:  Gifting is a good way to get property out of your estate so it avoids probate and reduces estate taxes.  In 2008, the IRS limits the value of assets you can give without paying a gift tax to $14,000 per person per year.  The downside of gifting is that you lose control of the asset.  If you give property to your children, they might sell it against your wishes.  And if you outlive your child, your gift may not be returned to you.

Revocable Living Trust:  A Revocable Living Trust is a separate legal entity that holds title to property. After you set up a Trust, you put property into your Trust, called “funding the Trust.”  At the time of the funding, you change the title on real estate deeds to the name of the trustee and trust, such as the “John Jones, Trustee of the Jones Revocable Living Trust u/a/d July 1, 2009.”  When you transfer personal property and real estate into your Trust, you no longer own these assets in your own name.  This means these assets don’t have to go through probate.

Step #4: Choose the method for distributing your property that is right for you.

Court Supervision.  Will or no estate plan:  Either is easy to maintain during your lifetime, and your distribution plan is supervised by the Court through probate.  In the worst case situation, probate can cost thousands of dollars and take months or even years to complete.  You lose all privacy because your file is a matter of public record.  Small estates can transfer title without the need for qualification, but this method is not available to most estates.

Private Supervision.  Revocable Living Trusts allow you to control your property without Court involvement.  Revocable Living Trusts completely avoid probate if properly funded before death.  They avoid the dangers of Joint Tenancy.  They keep your affairs private.  Upon your death, subject to payment of debts and taxes, your estate is able to transfer to your heirs within a few days.  Plus, your Revocable Living Trust eliminates the need for a guardianship or conservatorship.

Step #5: Act now, while you are competent to make your own decisions.

None of us likes to think that we may become incapacitated or die.  Yet it happens every day.  We all have friends who have been injured in car accidents.  We all know people who have had heart attacks, even when they were in “excellent health.”

If you want to see how dramatically people’s lives change every day, just watch the news.  You’ll see car accidents, plane crashes, shootings, heart attacks, drownings…the list seems endless.  And yet every one of those people thought their day would end just as safely as it began.

Will you be next?  The greatest gift you can give your spouse and your children is an asset protection, elder law, and estate plan — a plan that you have designed to carry out your wishes when something happens to you.  This is how you can insure that you won’t become a burden to your children.

I sincerely hope you live a long, happy life in excellent health.  I also hope you have your asset protection, elder law, and estate plan ready to protect your family from probate and the other problems we all face every day.



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Trusts In Estate Planning

Trusts are a very powerful tool in estate planning.

First, a revocable living trust can provide management for your assets in times of incapacity without your loved ones needing to go  to court.

A trust avoids the long, emotionally tiring process of probate.

Trusts protect your privacy by keeping your affairs out of the courts.

Trusts help protect your assets from creditors and financial predators.



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Testamentary Trust

A trust created in an individual’s Last Will and Testament is called a testamentary trust.

Because a will can become effective only upon death, a testamentary trust is generally created at or following death.



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Setting Up A Living Trust

Setting up a living trust is not a do it yourself job for the faint of heart…

You need to understand the legal definition of a trust, and make sure that all of the elements of a trust are present before signing the document.

You next need to make sure that all of the “legalese” is proper.  One sentence, one word in some cases, can make the difference between an effective trust and an ineffective trust.

Titling assets to the trust needs to be done properly.  While much of it can be done by you, unless you are familiar with creating and registering deeds, it is a job best left to a professional.

One misstep can cost $1000’s in further legal fees or lead to public court battles that you want to avoid.



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Revocable Trust

A Revocable Trust is a trust that you can dismantle (revoke) during your lifetime.

A Revocable Trust kind may be changed, altered or revoked by you at any point during your life, provided you mentally competent. Revocable trusts are becoming increasingly common in the US as a substitute for a Last Will and Testament to minimize administrative costs associated with probate and to provide centralized administration of a person’s final affairs after their passing.

Contrast that with a irrevocable trust, which takes careful legal maneuvering to even get assets out of.



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Revocable Living Trust

A Revocable Living Trust is a trust (Revocable Trust) that is

  1. Revocable (as long as you are mentally competent and alive)
  2. Established during your lifetime

During your lifetime, with a revocable living trust, you typically play all the roles in the trust.  You are the “grantor” by putting assets into the trust.  You are the “trustee” because you are managing the assets.  And finally, you are the “beneficiary” because you are getting the benefit of the assets.  But, you don’t have to play all the roles.  There is nothing that says you can’t have a third party trustee.

You get most, if not all, the benefits of a trust, but maintain full control over the assets.



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Irrevocable Trust

An irrevocable trust is a trust in which the terms cannot be amended or changed until the terms or purposes of the trust have been completed. In rare cases, a court may change the terms of the trust due to unexpected changes in circumstances that make the trust uneconomical or unwieldy to administer, under normal circumstances an irrevocable trust may not be changed by the trustee or the beneficiaries of the trust.

Contrast with a revocable trust.



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Grantor Trust

A trust over which the “grantor” retains the ability to direct or control the assets in the trust.

The Internal Revenue Service has a set of complicated statutes and regulations to determine if a trust is a “grantor” trust or not.

Basically, to not be a “grantor” trust, the “grantor” must give up all control over the assets in the trust.



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Trusts

Trusts come in many different types.

One legal definition might read like this:  “A trust is a contract between the grantor and trustee where the grantor transfers title of assets to the trustee and the trustee manages the assets for the benefit of the beneficiaries.”

A trust is a container, like a bucket, that holds assets.  You have the “trustee” hold the bucket and take care of what is in it.  The “trustee” takes care of the assets for the benefit of you or another person.

One of the most commonly used trusts for probate avoidance is the revocable living trust.



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Saturday, July 9, 2016

Types of Trusts

Trusts came in many types.

The most common estate planning trust is the revocable living trust.

You also have testamentary trusts, which are established by a Last Will and Testament.

Here is a list of some of the different types of trusts:

  • Revocable Trust
  • Revocable Living Trust
  • Irrevocable Trust
  • ILIT – Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust
  • SNT – Supplemental Needs Trust
  • Testamentary
  • Dynasty


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What is a Living Trust?

A living trust is a trust you establish during your lifetime.

Also known as an “inter vivos” trust.



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Springing Power of Attorney

A springing power of attorney is one that only becomes active under certain conditions.

These usual condition is that you are no longer able to make your own rational, informed decisions or are having trouble making decisions.  It usually takes a doctor’s opinion of incompetence to make the power of attorney “spring” into affect.

Determining whether the principal is incompetent enough to start this type of representation is a formal process. Springing powers of attorney are not automatic, and institutions may refuse to work with the attorney-in-fact. Disputes are then resolved in court.



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Medical Power of Attorney

Your Medical Power of Attorney is a specialized power of attorney specifically for how you want your healthcare managed.

Your medical power of attorney names a person you trust to act as your attorney-in-fact if you cannot make your own decisions or speak for yourself.

You may choose different people to make financial decisions (your regular durable power of attorney) and to make medical decisions.

As with most of powers of attorney, as long as you are legally competent to make your own decisions, you may revoke your medical power of attorney.



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Durable Power of Attorney

A Durable Power of Attorney is one that stays active even if you are not able to make your own decisions.

If a power of attorney is not durable, then the moment you become unable to make your own decisions (i.e. legally incompetent) the power of attorney stops working. This does not give you the protection and security that you need in life.  You need a power of attorney that continues to work even when you are not capable of making your own informed, rational decisions.

By default, in most states, a power of attorney is not durable.

In estate planning, the preference is for a Durable Power of Attorney. Durable means that it will not stop working if you become mentally incapacitated, that is unable to make your own decisions.



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Power of Attorney

A power of attorney is a powerful tool in the estate planning toolbox.

Simple question, complex answer.

Mike is buying a house, but is a traveling salesman. He cannot make it to the closing, so signs a paper allowing his brother to sign at closing on his behalf. That is a sample of a power of attorney. In this case it is specific and temporary.

A power of attorney (POA) is giving somebody else the authority to make legal and financial decisions for you, preferably in writing, witnessed, and notarized.

Everybody over the age of 18 should have a trusted backup person who can make decisions.

A POA can be durable or temporary. A POA can be for a specific purpose, as in Mike’s situation, or general in nature. A POA can be completely custom written, or based on the forms in the state statutes.

In estate planning, the preference is for a Durable Power of Attorney. Durable means that it will not stop working if you become mentally incapacitated, that is unable to make your own decisions.

The preference is also for the POA to become effective immediately.



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Friday, July 8, 2016

What About The Cost Of Estate Planning?

Let me answer a question with a question.

Does it?

Estate planning is an investment in you and your family. Estate planning is not about you, it is about them.  Planning is an investment in love designed to protect your spouse, children, and other loved ones.

Estate planning is a financial investment. Where else can you invest a dollar and get back $2, $3, or more? A plan on $300,000 estate (not uncommon) is $2,500. Probate and other expenses on that estate are about $18,000. You put in a $1 and your family pulled out $7.20. That is a 720% return on investment.

If you could empower yourself to protect your children, yourself, your family, and your property against the rigors and unforgiving nature of the courts and law for less than the cost of a convenience store cup of coffee a day, would you pay that much? What about financial predators? Creditors?

Joe bought $1.85 mediocre coffee every day at the convenience store. Instead he started taking a cup of good coffee from home and started putting that money in a jar. At the end of a year he had $481.00 stuck in the jar. (Imagine if that was a $3.00 Starbucks cup of coffee. That would be $780.00 in a year).

That’s right. For less than the cost of a lousy cup of coffee, you can protect your children, yourself, your family, and your property.

For that measly amount, you are getting a well thought out, custom, individualized plan, not a “box” plan from the office supply store or online. You can get legal advice, not just a form to fill out.

There is something to the saying “you get what you pay for.” Lisa did an online will but did not get part of it notarized. This could have caused a big problem later if it was not caught during other work being done by an estate planning attorney. The overall cost would have been much greater than having a custom plan done.

The overall cost includes not only the attorney’s time, but training, assistants, witnesses, drafting, proof reading, and overhead of the building.

This does not include transferring assets to any trust(s) created. Excess asset transfers will add to the base price. If you don’t transfer your assets, then any trust created is worthless.

Any Supplemental Needs Trusts will add to the price.

If the attorney has to go to your location, then travel time at the hourly rate will typically be added.

Breaking this down by a minimum every 5 year review, you are looking at $1.21 per day. That is less than the cost of a cup of cruddy convenience store coffee every day.

Finally, don’t expect bargain prices if you just need a single document. An attorney, like a CPA or doctor’s office, has an overhead to open the file, make notes, do the work, and close the file.



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Why Estate Planning?

Estate planning is an investment in you and your family. Estate planning is not about you, it is about them.  Planning is an investment in love designed to protect your spouse, children, and other loved ones.

Estate planning is a financial investment. Where else can you invest a dollar and get back $2, $3, or more? A plan on $300,000 estate (not uncommon) is $2,500. Probate and other expenses on that estate are about $18,000. You put in a $1 and your family pulled out $7.20. That is a 720% return on investment.

You protect family members who depend on you. If something happened to you, could your family continue to live in the same home? Would they have enough to pay for food? You help maintain their lifestyle.

Plan for the unexpected. You prepare for unexpected illness or injury. If you were to become very sick, keep your family on solid footing. Cover bills and other financial responsibilities.

You need planning because you want to protect your spouse and children from enduring the emotional roller coaster and expense of

  • Getting a guardianship ($$$$)  in court so they can care for your health and finances
  • The emotional torment and financial strain of probate
  • Losing their inheritance in a divorce
  • Being preyed on by a financial predator

 

You want planning to ensure your spouse and children never endure:

  • The expense and emotional torment of probate
  • Guardianship proceedings and cost ($$$$)
  • Losing their inheritance in a divorce
  • Paying for your long term care because of the never-ending ever-increasing costs of care
  • Fending off financial predators

 

The main reasons people give, when asked, for estate planning are to

  • Avoid family chaos and discord. Set and meet expectations of the family so there is no misunderstanding.
  • Avoid probate.
  • Protect children from mismanaging their inheritance, and estate taxes.
  • Distribute assets in a timely manner instead of waiting on the courts.
  • Make sure your wishes are carried out if you cannot make decisions.
  • It is you last teachable moment.
  • Blended families.

If you have minor children, you should nominate guardians in case both parents don’t make it until the children are adults. If you don’t name a guardian, a judge will make the decision without your input.



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What Is Estate Planning?

Estate planning is an investment in you and your family. Estate planning is not about you, it is about them.  Planning is an investment in love designed to protect your spouse, children, and other loved ones.

Estate planning is a financial investment. Where else can you invest a dollar and get back $2, $3, or more? A plan on $300,000 estate (not uncommon) is $2,500. Probate and other expenses on that estate are about $18,000. You put in a $1 and your family pulled out $7.20. That is a 720% return on investment.

Estate planning is the process of planning. During your life.  For what will happen to your health, finances, stuff, and assets. Estate planning can be used to get rid of uncertainties.  About the uncertainty of probate.  And to maximize the value of the estate by reducing taxes and other expenses.

The ultimate goal of estate planning is determined by the specific goals of the client.  And may be as simple or complex as the client’s needs dictate.

Guardians are often designated for minor children and beneficiaries in incapacity.

Estate planning uses a variety of tools including trusts, wills, powers of attorney, medical powers of attorney, and much more.



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What Is Your Estate?

  • Money
  • Life Insurance
  • Home, real estate
  • Business
  • Personal Property, collections, cars, tools, pets, etc.
  • Your Values
  • Your Family
  • Your Legacy

Planning for your estate should focus on your family, your values, and your legacy.

Traditional estate planning has often just planned for your finances – your cash and investment accounts, your life insurance policies, your home, and all of your personal property.

Proper planning not only plans for your financial well being but also your personal legacy and the financial well being of your heirs.



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Advance Directive

Another term for Living Will.

An advance directive usually provides specific instructions for the treatment that is to be followed by healthcare providers and caregivers. In some cases an advance directive may forbid the use of various kinds of burdensome medical treatment. It may also be used to express wishes about the use or foregoing of food and water, if supplied via tubes or other medical devices.

An advance directive is used only if the individual has become unable to give informed consent or refusal due to incapacity.

An advance directive can be very specific or very general.



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Living Wills

A living will usually provides specific instructions for the treatment that is to be followed by healthcare providers and caregivers. In some cases a living will may forbid the use of various kinds of burdensome medical treatment. It may also be used to express wishes about the use or foregoing of food and water, if supplied via tubes or other medical devices.

A living will is used only if the individual has become unable to give informed consent or refusal due to incapacity.

A living will can be very specific or very general.



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Asset Protection Planning

Asset protection planning is actually risk planning against the costly curves life will throw at you.

Make a personal commitment to yourself and your family that you will do everything possible to protect your family and your assets.

Lawsuits can quickly tie up your assets.  And if the other party wins the lawsuit, the judgment against you could quickly deplete your funds.  If you drive frequently, own rental property, or operate a business, buy an umbrella liability policy that protects your assets from lawsuits.

Many people who never expect Alzheimer’s disease to strike have had to face its problems with no advance planning.  So plan for Alzheimer’s disease now, while you have time.  This includes the need to address issues of backup decision-makers, assisted living, and nursing home care.  If your children can care for you later in life, that’s fine.  If they cannot, your advance planning will pay big dividends.  Plan for the worst — and hope for the best.  Then, in either case, you will have all your bases covered.

Examples of Costly Problem Areas

> Disability: This year you are six times more likely to become disabled than to die. Even so, many asset protection and estate plans have no provisions that deal with disability.

> Lawsuits: In the U.S., one lawsuit is filed every 30 seconds — over 90 million each year. Many asset protection and estate plans do not protect the beneficiaries’ interest from creditors and divorce.

> Powers of Attorney: Most powers of attorney are outdated when presented. And at the time they are needed, many powers of attorney are nowhere to be found.

> Bankruptcy: More young people are filing for bankruptcy than are graduating from college. Yet most asset protection and estate plans do not protect a young adult’s inheritance from bankruptcy and creditors.

> Legacy: Most estates don’t last long enough to get to the grandchildren. Yet, estates can pass from children to grandchildren free from estate taxes. Most trusts do not contain the language for this to occur.

> Unfunded Trusts: Most asset protection and estate plans are established with sophisticated provisions to avoid taxes and probate. Still, many living trusts are of no value because they were never funded.



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Asset Protection Attorney

An asset protection attorney needs to have a good knowledge in the following areas:

Estate Planning

Gary offers advice and analysis regarding all types of Wills and Trusts. Then, based on his client’s needs, he creates and implements * Credit Shelter Trusts * Marital Trusts * Generation Skipping Trusts * Living Trusts * Irrevocable Life Insurance Trusts * Qualified Personal Residence Trusts, and * Special Needs Trusts.

Creditor Protection Strategies

Gary offers advice and analysis regarding creditor protection strategies. Then, based on his client’s needs, he creates and implements * Family Limited Partnerships * Limited Liability Companies * S Corporations * Marital Property Partition Agreements, and * Living QTIP Trusts.

Charitable Estate Planning

Gary offers advice and analysis regarding charitable strategies. Then, based on his client’s needs, he creates and implements * Charitable Remainder Unitrusts * Charitable Remainder Annuity Trusts * Charitable Lead Trusts * Private Foundations, and * Donor Advised Funds.
Educational Funding Planning

Gary offers advice and analysis regarding educational funding strategies. This includes advice and analysis regarding 529 Plans and Uniform Transfers to Minor’s Act Accounts. In addition, Gary creates and implements 2503(c) Trusts and Crummy Trusts.

Estate Planning for Retirement Plans & IRAs

Gary offers advice and analysis regarding strategies to defer income taxes. Then, based on his client’s needs, he implements strategies to defer the maximum amount of income tax through proper use of the minimum distribution rules. In addition, Gary offers advice, analysis and services regarding * How to preserve tax deferral benefits of retirement accounts * How to leave money in the IRA to create maximum wealth * The proper beneficiary designations * Strategies to reduce estate taxes associated with qualified plan benefits and IRAs, and * How to integrate trusts with qualified plans and IRAs.



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Asset Protection

Asset Protection is about protecting your assets from creditors, lawsuits, and predators.

The State’s Plan

If you choose not to write your own plan, the state of Arkansas has one written for you, generally:

  • Anything not titled jointly goes 1/3 to the surviving spouse and 2/3 immediately to the children
  • Your family must go through the public court process of probate or administration
  • Your family must wait for access to money
  • Your financial decisions will be made by a judge
  • Your medical decisions will be made by doctors and judges
  • Your family’s private information becomes public

Costly Problems Cause by the State’s Plan

Not to mention the costly problems you and your family face during life and after you are gone:

  • Who will care for you in case of mental or physical incapacity?
  • Who will manage your assets?
  • Who will manage your affairs?
  • Who will manage your healthcare?
  • Will you family fight over decisions?
  • Who will watch over your children?
  • Who will inherit?
  • Who will care for children with special needs?
  • And many more…


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11 Mistakes That Tear Families Apart and Cause Children to Suffer

Mistake #1: Relying on Arkansas’ estate plan.  If you do not set up an estate plan, upon your death your property will be distributed according to the laws of your last state of residence.  Often, the law will require the probate judge to give your property to someone other than the person(s) you would have chosen.

Mistake #2: Relying on a Will.  If your estate plan consists only of a Will, your heirs may face many costly problems, such as probate and/or conservatorship proceedings.  True, a Will is the most common estate planning tool, but it may not be the best tool to use.

Mistake #3: Relying on Joint Tenancy.  Almost everybody owns their bank accounts in Joint Tenancy.  Yet Joint Tenancy often causes families horrible legal nightmares.  You have many options that are better and safer than owning property in Joint Tenancy, and they come with much less risk.

Mistake #4: Relying on Community Property laws.  Relying on the Community Property laws is a position many clients take.  However, as in Joint Tenancy, your property will still have to go through probate on the death of the spouse.  Also, as in Joint Tenancy, Community Property ownership requires a conservatorship if a spouse is incapacitated and the home needs a mortgage, home equity line, or to be sold.  Relying on the Community Property laws is not a good estate plan.

Mistake #5: Relying on Guardianships.  These Court-supervised proceedings for addressing your physical or mental incapacity are costly, time-consuming and horribly burdensome.  When you set up a Living Trust and transfer your assets into it, you avoid the need for a guardianship.  You also need to put into place up to date Powers of Attorney, Health Care Powers of Attorney and Directives to Physicians.

Mistake #6: Relying on the small estate affidavit procedure as your way of avoiding probate.  Most people assume they have fewer assets than they actually have.  The small estate exemption that avoids probate is permitted only for estates consisting of less than $100,000 of personal property excluding debt and not debts are allowed.

Mistake #7: Relying on a gifting program as your way of avoiding probate.  The law allows you to give away your property at a rate of $14,000 per person per year.  A married couple can give $28,000 per year to anyone they choose without gift tax consequences.  While this is an effective way to reduce the size of your estate, it has two downsides:

First, you lose control of the assets you have given away.
Second, minor beneficiaries get total control over everything that has been given to them when they turn 21, if the gift is to a uniform transfer to minors act account (UTMA Account).

To avoid that problem certain Trusts would need to be established to receive gifts to minors.

Mistake #8: Relying on the Courts to take care of your child’s finances.  If you die intestate (with no Will) or with only a Will, and your property passes to your minor child, the Court will put your child’s money into a Court-supervised guardianship involving annual accountings to the Court.

Naturally, this requires CPAs to prepare accountings, lawyers to file those accountings with the Court, plus filing fees.  In addition, since the (State) probate code imposes the most conservative investment standards, this might significantly lower the return on your child’s investment.  It also means that the Court determines the person who will serve as guardian of the property, who may not be the person you would have chosen.

Mistake #9: Relying on a form kit for your Will or Living Trust.  One size does not fit all because no two people or families are alike.  Do you know even one family whose concerns are the same as yours?  From your family’s needs and dynamics — to personalities and values — can you imagine any form kit ever being suitable for any family?  If you use a form kit, you’re asking for problems.  The only estate plan you can rely on is one that is custom prepared by a qualified estate planning lawyer.

Mistake #10: Relying on an attorney who uses boiler-plate Living Trust documents to provide for your spouse and children.  When you create your Living Trust, you and your lawyer have the opportunity to write specific instructions about how you want to provide for your surviving spouse and children.  If you overlook this opportunity, your family will receive whatever care the one-size-fits-all form documents provide.  That care is almost never as good as the care you would want your family to receive.

Mistake #11: Relying on the wrong attorney.  Most attorneys know very little about estate planning.  What’s more, even estate planning attorneys often don’t put much time or energy into a Minor’s Trust.  Responsible parents realize a Minor’s Trust is the most important part of their family estate plan.  That’s why I urge you to choose an estate planning attorney who has the primary focus, mission and purpose to help you achieve your family’s estate planning goals:  putting your children first.



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5 Dangerous Holes in Your Estate Plan That Could Hurt Your Family and Cost You a Fortune

Dangerous Hole #1: Disability Planning.  You have two children who live within 30 minutes of you.  Your other child lives out of state.  You suffer a severe stroke and require monitoring 24 hours a day.

One local child wants to move in with you and provide all of your care.  The other local child thinks an assisted living facility would be safer and provide better care.  And your out-of-state child wants you to use your income and savings to hire around-the-clock home health care aides so you can stay at home.

Who decides on where you should live and how to use your money?  Make sure YOU decide by properly planning for any disability or incapacity.

Dangerous Hole #2: Assisted Living Care Planning.  One spouse requires assisted living care and the other spouse continues to live in the family home.  Neither spouse wants to think about nursing home placement.  After several years of paying privately for assisted living care, they have spent almost all of their life savings.  Now, how will the healthy spouse avoid total financial ruin?  Proper advance planning can prevent this terrible problem.

Dangerous Hole #3: Nursing Home Care Planning.  Both spouses purchase long-term care insurance policies that cover nursing home costs for two years.  One spouse enters the nursing home, which triggers the start of the policy.  What steps should now be taken to protect assets for the healthy spouse while the long-term care insurance pays the nursing home costs? To be able to take the necessary steps, you must do proper planning in advance.

Dangerous Hole #4: Second-to-need-care Planning.  One spouse gets sick.  The other spouse cares for the sick spouse in their family home.  Then the caring spouse gets sick.  Now, who cares for both the first and second spouse?  Without proper advance planning, how can you hope to solve this problem?

Dangerous Hole #5: Who-takes-care-of-the-finances Planning.  The spouse who handles the money and writes the checks dies.  The surviving spouse is now left with handling the money, something he or she has never done.  Now, who pays the bills? With proper advance planning, you can solve this problem.



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14 Costly Misconceptions About Planning for Your Senior Years

Misconception #1: Most seniors move into nursing homes as a result of minor physical ailments that make it hard for them to get around.  Wrong!  A large percentage of admissions to nursing homes is because of serious health, behavior, and safety issues caused by Alzheimer’s disease and dementia.

Misconception #2: Nursing home costs in Arkansas average $1,500 to $2,500 per month per person.  Hardly.  Current nursing home charges for one resident typically run $5,200 per month, or $62,400 per year, which does not include prescription drugs — and those costs continue to rise.

Misconception #3: Children can care for a parent with Alzheimer’s disease at home, without the need for nursing home care.  Not true!  Many patients with Alzheimer’s disease end up in nursing homes because children are simply unable to provide the level of care their parent needs.  In most cases, the children want to care for their parents.  But, as a practical matter, they simply can’t.  Moving a parent into a nursing home is an intensely personal issue and should not be labeled as a right or wrong decision. In many cases, it’s the only realistic option.  The rare exception is when the family has enough money to pay for skilled nursing care at home.

Misconception #4: Standard legal forms are all you need for a good estate plan.  Not true.  A competent estate plan begins with clearly defined goals, supported by well-drafted legal documents, and the repositioning of assets, as needed, to protect your estate from taxes, probate costs, and catastrophic nursing home costs.

Misconception #5: Your child will never move you into a nursing home.  Wrong.  Most children consider all options before moving a parent into a nursing home.  But, sadly, children usually find they have no other alternative.  As a result, parents who never expected to live in a nursing home soon discover that a nursing home is the only place with the staff and equipment to provide the care they need.

Misconception #6: As payment for nursing home care, the government will take your family home.  Not true, if you plan ahead.  Many people fear that the government will take their home in exchange for nursing home care, but you can avoid this with proper planning.  You’ll be glad to know there are some ways you can protect your home so it won’t be taken.

Misconception #7: You will never end up in a nursing home.  That’s hard to predict.  Your odds are roughly 50/50.  Of Americans reaching age 65 in any year, nearly half will spend some time in a nursing home.  And a surprising number will require care for longer than one year.  That means every year, tens of thousands of seniors will face costs of $48,000 or more, which does not include the cost of prescription drugs.

Misconception #8: If your spouse enters a nursing home, all of your joint savings will have to be spent on his or her care.  No.  With proper planning you can keep half of your combined “countable” assets up to approximately $129,000.  In some circumstances, you may be able to protect nearly all of your life savings.  In fact, it is often possible to protect much more than the $129,000 maximum.  “Countable” assets are those assets such as cash, checking accounts, savings, CDs, stocks, and bonds that the government considers available to be spent on the cost of nursing home care.

Misconception #9: Legally, you can give away only $14,000 to each of your children each year.  Not true.  You can give away any amount, but you have to report to the IRS gifts in excess of $14,000 per recipient per year ($28,000 if both husband and wife make a gift).    However, there is no requirement that you pay any gift tax unless you have exhausted your lifetime exclusion amount, which is currently set at $5,450,000 for an individual.

Misconception #10: You can wait to do long-term planning until your spouse or you get sick.  Yes, to some degree.  However, you and your spouse will be much better off if you have taken important planning steps in advance, before a crisis occurs.  What stops most people from being able to effectively plan when they are in the middle of a crisis is that the ill person is unable to make decisions and sign the necessary legal documents.

Misconception #11: All General Durable Powers of Attorney are created equal.  Completely false!  A General Durable Power of Attorney is a highly customized legal document — and NOT a form!  Most Durable Powers of Attorney don’t contain even the most basic gifting authority.  Without a gifting power, your agent is usually limited to spending your money on your bills and selling your assets to generate cash to pay your bills.

Some Durable Powers of Attorney contain a gifting provision, but often it is limited to $10,000 or $11,000 per year.  This figure is too small for effective asset protection planning, and relates to a completely different type of federal estate and gift tax issue.  Other Durable Powers of Attorney allow transfers only to certain people and do not take into account that you may want your agent, spouse, or children to receive your property.

Misconception #12: Since you are married, your spouse will be able to manage your property and make financial decisions without a general durable power of attorney.  Not true.  If you become incapacitated and your spouse needs to sell or mortgage the family home — or gain access to financial accounts that are in your name only — your spouse will need a general durable power of attorney.  Without one, your spouse will have to go to Court and get the judge’s permission to act on your behalf by way of a conservatorship proceeding.

Misconception #13: You can hide your assets while you become eligible for Medicaid.  False!  Intentional misrepresentation in a Medicaid application is a crime and can be costly.  The IRS shares any information concerning your income or assets with the local Medicaid eligibility office.  You — or whoever applied for Medicaid — may have to repay Medicaid to avoid prosecution.

Misconception #14: Medicaid rules that applied to your neighbor when he went into a nursing home will also apply to you.  Maybe not.  Medicaid rules change.  Don’t assume the law that applied to your neighbor will also apply to you.  In addition, there may have been facts about your neighbor’s situation that you just don’t know.



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8 Dangers of Owning Property in Joint Tenancy

“Joint Tenancy With Right of Survivorship” means that each person has equal access to the property.  When one owner dies, that person’s share immediately passes to the other owner(s) in equal shares, without going through probate.  We’ve all been told that Joint Tenancy is a simple and inexpensive way to avoid probate, and this is sometimes true.  But the tax and legal problems of Joint Tenancy ownership can be mind-boggling.  The dangers of Joint Tenancy include the following:

Danger #1: Only Delays Probate.  When either joint tenant dies, the survivor — usually a spouse or a child — immediately becomes the owner of the entire property.  But when the survivor dies, the property still must go through probate.  Joint Tenancy doesn’t avoid probate; it simply delays it.

Danger #2: Two Probates When Joint Tenants Die Together.  If both of the joint tenants die at the same time, such as in a car accident, there will be two probate administrations, one for the share of each joint tenant in the Joint Tenancy property as well as any other property they each may own.

Danger #3: Unintentional Disinheriting.  When blended families are involved, with children from previous marriages, here’s what could happen: the husband dies and the wife becomes the owner of the property.  When the wife dies, the property goes to her children, leaving nothing for the husband’s children.

Danger #4: Gift Taxes.  When you place a non-spouse on your property as a joint tenant, you make a gift of property every time that joint tenant takes property out of the account.  For example, when a mother retitles her $80,000 home in Joint Tenancy with her son, she makes a gift to her son every time he makes withdrawals.  This may not be the most efficient use of her $14,000 annual exclusion.  The main point is that the gift is unintentional and not carefully planned.

Danger #5: Right to Sell or Encumber.  Joint Tenancy makes it more difficult to sell or mortgage property because it requires the agreement of both parties, which may not be easy to get.

Danger #6: Financial Problems.  If either owner of Joint Tenancy property fails to pay income taxes, the IRS can place a tax lien on the property.  If either owner files for bankruptcy, the trustee can sell the property even though the other joint tenant is not otherwise involved in the bankruptcy.

Danger #7: Court Judgments.  If either joint tenant has a judgment entered against them, such as from a car accident or business dealings, the holder of the judgment can execute the judgment against the Joint Tenancy property.

Danger #8: Incapacity.  If either joint owner becomes physically or mentally incapacitated and can no longer sign his name, the Court must give its approval before any jointly owned property can be sold or refinanced — even if the co-owner is the spouse.
Because of the tremendous risks, I suggest: “Consider all the possibilities of both joint tenancy and tenants in common and carefully review the possible consequences with an attorney.”



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11 Problems That Could Cost Your Family a Fortune — and Their Solutions

Problem #1: Probate.  Probate is the Court-supervised process of passing title and ownership of a deceased person’s property to his or her heirs.  The process consists of assembling assets, giving notice to creditors, paying bills and taxes, and passing title to property when the judge signs the order.

Probate can cost your loved ones a sizeable portion of your estate.  The biggest portion of the costs are the fees charged by attorneys and personal representatives for their services for the estate, in addition to filing fees, costs of publication, fees for copies of death certificates, filing and recording fees, bond premiums, appraisal and accounting fees, and so on.

Often the fees of attorneys and personal representatives are based on a hourly rate, and while they can tell you what their hourly rate is, they cannot tell you the number of hours their services will take, so they cannot tell you what their total fees will be.

Like surgery, probate can be simple and easy, but frequently probate can have very drastic and damaging results.  Accordingly, like surgery, because of its uncertainty in terms of both the potential for problems and high costs and fees, probate is something best to prepare for if you can.

You can avoid a substantially larger probate process by having an estate planning lawyer set up and fund a Revocable Living Trust.  Since the Trust actually owns your assets, no significant probate of the estate will be required, saving your family many thousands of dollars.

Problem #2: Lawsuits and Creditors.  Protect the property you leave to your spouse and children from the claims of their creditors, ex-spouses, and the IRS.  This can best be done with proper creditor protection provisions in a Revocable Living Trust.

Problem #3: Income Taxes.  A family can lower its overall income taxes by setting up a Family Limited Partnership to own income-producing property.  A parent can do this by setting up a Family Limited Partnership and making gifts of limited partnership interests to the other limited partners, normally their children or grandchildren who pay income tax at lower tax rates.  A Family Limited Partnership is an excellent tool to shift income to partners who pay taxes at lower rates.  It is also an effective way to make gifts and still keep total control of the property owned by the partnership.

Problem #4: Lawsuits.  Protect your assets from lawsuits by doing any or all of the following, as appropriate:
(1) purchasing an umbrella liability insurance policy,
(2) setting up a Family Limited Partnership,
(3) setting up a program for lifetime gifting,
(4) setting up a Limited Liability Company, and
(5) incorporating.

Further, you can protect your children from lawsuits by putting their inheritances into a Discretionary Trust.  This is especially important if your children are likely to become professionals subject to potential malpractice actions or, on the other hand, are spendthrifts!

Problem #5: Inexperienced Beneficiaries.  Protect your assets from being wasted by young or inexperienced family members.  Most beneficiaries spend their entire inheritances in less than two years, regardless of the size of the estate or the heir’s socio-economic background.  Your lawyer can set up your Family Trust with protective provisions that provide guidance and safeguard your life savings.

Problem #6: Guardianships.  Protect your assets from the high costs of incapacity by (1) setting up a Living Trust so you avoid the need for a guardianship, (2) drawing up an Advance Healthcare Directive, and (3) drawing up a Health Care Power of Attorney.

Problem #7: Nursing Home Care.  Protect joint assets from the high costs of nursing home care.  Buy insurance that covers nursing home care and provides a death benefit that returns the money spent on nursing home care to your heirs.

Problem #8: Unwanted Medical Care.  Protect your assets from unwanted and costly medical care by having an Advance Healthcare Directive and Health Care Powers of Attorney that spell out your instructions, including which medical care, treatment and procedures you want — and which you don’t want.

Problem #9: Unwanted Emergency Care.  Protect your assets from unwanted emergency care.  If you have a terminal illness, you can draw up and sign a Pre-hospital Medical Directive that will tell emergency personnel not to resuscitate you in the event of a medical emergency.  This directive is often referred to as a “Do Not Resuscitate Order”.

Problem #10: Ineffective Estate Plans.  Protect your assets from an ineffective estate plan.  Don’t depend on pre-printed “cookie cutter” form kits or document preparation services for your estate plan.  Contrary to what you may have heard or read, one size does not fit all!

You may think you have precisely what you need.  But you will never know — because your family members will have to clean up the mess.  You see, after you die, your family members will try to use your documents to settle your estate.  And if the documents weren’t drafted correctly, they will cause additional expense and long delays because a probate will have to be done to convey title to your assets.

Problem #11: Unqualified Lawyers.  Many attorneys are getting into estate planning because it’s less stressful than other areas of law.

Not surprisingly, most of these newcomers focus on the needs of senior citizens and almost never deal with issues affecting young families.

If you have young children, make sure you choose an independent attorney who focuses their law practice on asset protection and estate planning for young families.  This will help insure that the lawyer you choose has the knowledge, skill, experience and judgment necessary to fully protect your family and your assets, and to give you advice and counsel that is in your best interests.



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8 Potential Problems With Revocable Living Trusts

Problem #1: Choosing the wrong trustee.  Many people believe that you must name your bank as your trustee, but this is not the case.

I recommend you act as your own trustee (if you are married, your spouse can serve as a co-trustee) so you continue to manage and invest your assets, just as you do now.

If you do not choose to serve as trustee, you may hire a professional fiduciary who is not affiliated with a bank or trust company.

Problem #2: Leaving your Trust empty.  A Revocable Living Trust is like a safe deposit box.  It’s a good place to put your valuables, but it won’t do any good if you leave it empty.  It’s not uncommon for people to have a lawyer draw up their Trust and then, years later, still have to go through probate.

Why?  Because neither they nor their attorney ever put their assets into the Trust.  Your property must be put into the Trust.  But don’t worry.  The process of retitling assets is easier than you think.

Problem #3: Initial cost.  A Revocable Living Trust is more expensive to set up than a simple Will.  But, in the long run, the cost will probably be much less because the Revocable Living Trust allows you to avoid probate, Court supervised estate administration, guardianships and conservatorships.

Problem #4: The potential for poor management.  You could find that the person you selected to manage your affairs is not a good manager.  Your choices for successor trustee(s) should be family members or friends you can trust.  Corporate trustees, such as banks, are also an option.  But, even if you don’t put your assets into a trust, you could still have a problem with management of your assets.

Problem #5: Refinancing real estate may be inconvenient.  Some mortgage companies and banks require that you take real estate out of your Trust before they will place a new mortgage on your property. Once the financing is complete, then you simply transfer the property back into your Trust.

Problem #6: Keeping a list of assets in your Trust.  Some people don’t like to keep track of assets they put into their Trust.  Others don’t mind this small amount of extra work.  When you want to add something to your Trust, you simply title it in the name of the trustees and add it to your list.  I assure you the benefits of having a Revocable Living Trust far outweigh these minor inconveniences.

Problem #7: Opening a new bank account.  Some banks will require you to close your current bank account and open a new bank account if you transfer the account into a Trust.  This is a matter of the bank being uninformed.  If you have substantial direct deposits or automatic debits, it will be necessary to see that the new account is functioning properly before closing the old account.
Problem #8: Imprinting on your checks.  Some banks will require that you put the name of your Trust and trustees on the checks.  You can respond to this in one of three ways.

(1) The name of your Trust and trustees can very closely match your own name and be abbreviated in many respects.
(2) You can order checks from a printing company with anything on them that you choose.  Or
(3) you can print your own checks with very simple and inexpensive computer software packages.



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20 Costly Misconceptions About Wills and Trusts

Misconception #1: A Will avoids probate.  No.  A Will is the primary tool of the probate system. Your Will is like a letter to the Court telling the Court how you want your property distributed.  Then you must make sure that you prove to the Court that all your property is collected and appraised, and all your bills and taxes are paid, before your property can be distributed to your heirs.

Misconception #2: A Testamentary Trust avoids probate.  No.  A Testamentary Trust is a Trust contained within a Will that holds property for a specific purpose.  For example, one purpose would be to hold property until minor children turn 18, when they can legally own property — or until children reach the age when you believe they are mature enough to responsibly handle the property.  A Testamentary Trust is not a Revocable Living Trust.  It is part of a Will and takes effect only when the Will is probated.

Misconception #3: Probate costs and the costs of administration of the estate are small.  Not necessarily.  Such costs can be very substantial.  The real problem is, no one can tell you how much the costs will be until the probate has been completed, which often can take several years.

The biggest portion of the costs are the fees charged by attorneys and personal representatives for their services for the estate, in addition to filing fees, costs of publication, fees for copies of death certificates, filing and recording fees, bond premiums, appraisal and accounting fees, and more.  Often the fees of personal representatives are based on an hourly rate, and while they can tell you what their hourly rate is, they cannot tell you the number of hours their services will take, so they cannot tell you what their total fees will be.

Like surgery, probate can be simple and easy, but frequently probate can have drastic and damaging results.  Accordingly, like surgery, because of its uncertainty in terms of both the potential for problems and high costs and fees, probate is something best to avoid if you can.

Misconception #4: Property can be distributed according to the terms of your Will in only a few weeks.  In Arkansas, the administration usually takes 6 to 18 months.  During this time, the deceased person’s property must be inventoried and appraised.  Heirs must be notified.  Estate and inheritance taxes, if any, must be paid.  Contested claims, if any, must be settled.

Creditors must be notified and paid.  If all of this is not done before the estate is distributed to the beneficiaries of the estate, the personal representative will be personally responsible for those claims.  As a result, most personal representatives won’t distribute property until they are sure all claims have been settled.

Misconception #5: Your Will and your assets remain private.  No.  Because probate is a public legal proceeding, your estate may become a matter of public record.  This means that anyone — including nosy neighbors and salespeople — can go to Court to find out the balance in your savings account, the value of your stocks, even the appraised value of your diamonds.

Misconception #6: A Will helps you avoid taxes.  No.  A simple Will does nothing to lower your taxes. A Will simply tells how you want your property distributed, and who you want to act as guardian for your minor children in case you and your spouse die in a common accident.

A skilled lawyer can use a Will to plan complicated estates that require tax planning, but the cost of the complex plan will be comparable to the cost of a Revocable Living Trust plan.  Plus, the Will-based plan will still have to go through probate.

Misconception #7: Your permanent family home and your vacation home can be handled through the same probate and qualification.  Yes, but only if they are in the same state.  If you own property in different states, a second probate, called an ancillary administration, will need to be opened, which means your estate may need to hire another attorney. This will increase the overall estate administration expense.  And if you own real estate in other states, probates will need to be opened in those states as well.

Misconception #8: A Will prevents quarrels over assets.  Wrong.  Wills are among the most contested legal documents in the United States.  Today, it is common for unhappy relatives to challenge a Will.  This results in higher attorneys’ fees and even more delays.

Wills actually encourage challenges over assets because a petition must be filed in Court to probate them, which is like filing a lawsuit.  As a result, since a lawsuit has already been filed to probate the Will, a contesting party can simply file their claim in Court without instigating their own lawsuit.

Misconception #9: Estranged family members do not need to be notified of a probate if the Will excludes them from an inheritance.  In Arkansas, the Court may require that all heirs be notified of the probate even if they are excluded from the Will.  Certain aspects of the probate process can be avoided and financial responsibility can be mitigated through the use of various trusts and other types of financial planning.

Misconception #10: A Will from one state is not legal in another state.  Wrong.  If the Will is legal in the state where it was prepared, it is legal in all 50 states.  However, Wills do not travel well from state to state and should be reviewed by an attorney and very likely changed whenever you move to a new state. This is because the Will’s language may not mean the same in other states as it did in the state where it was signed.

In addition, many states require witnesses to the Will signing.  If proper procedures are not followed, you may need to produce those witnesses in order to probate the Will.

Misconception #11: A Will helps you when you become physically or mentally incapacitated.  No.  A Will is totally ineffective until death, and, therefore, does nothing to help you through incapacity and disability.  Your family or friends may have to go to Court to start costly guardianship or conservatorship proceedings.

Misconception #12: You must name your attorney as your personal representative.  No.  You may name anyone you choose.

Misconception #13: The cost of your estate plan is only the cost of drawing up the documents.  No.  The cost of your estate plan is both the cost of drafting the documents and the cost of distributing property to your heirs.  Simple Wills are less expensive to set up, but potentially expensive when they go through probate and there is qualification on the estate and estate administration.  Revocable Living Trusts may initially cost more than a simple Will, but the overall cost of settling your estate is often substantially less.

Misconception #14: Revocable Living Trusts are only for large estates.  No.  Revocable Living Trusts are for anyone who wants to avoid costly conservatorship and probate proceedings.  In appropriate cases, people with small estates can benefit from a Revocable Living Trust.  People with larger estates can benefit even more.

Misconception #15: A Revocable Living Trust is a public document.  No.  Your Revocable Living Trust can remain private because it does not have to be recorded or published in any way.  The only people who will know about your Trust are the people you choose to tell.  However, some professionals may need to review your Trust to confirm that your trustee is authorized to take a particular action.  This review is for the protection of all beneficiaries of the Trust.

Misconception #16: A Revocable Living Trust cannot be changed.  Wrong.  You can change and even revoke your Revocable Living Trust any time you wish.  The decision is entirely up to you.

Misconception #17: A Revocable Living Trust must have a separate tax return.  No.  As long as you are a trustee or co-trustee of your Revocable Living Trust, it does not need a tax return of its own.  Your personal tax return, which uses your social security number, is sufficient for the IRS.

Misconception #18: When you set up a Revocable Living Trust, you lose control of your assets.  No. When you set up your Revocable Living Trust, you simply name yourself and/or your spouse as Trust managers, called “trustees.”  In this way, you never give up control.

Misconception #19: The best way to transfer assets to your Revocable Living Trust is through a pour-over Will.  No.  A pour-over Will can be used to clean up the transfer of any miscellaneous assets to your Revocable Living Trust, but in order for that to take place, the Will must be probated for the assets to be transferred to the Revocable Living Trust.  A better course of action is to transfer the assets to your Trust while you are still healthy and able.  Not only will you get the peace of mind that comes from knowing the transfer was made properly, you will also get an accurate inventory of your estate.

Misconception #20: There are no costs associated with administering a Trust at the death of the original settlor of the Trust.  Not true.  While people commonly think that only the probate system costs money and takes time, they fail to understand that administering a Trust, distributing Trust assets to beneficiaries named in the Trust, and terminating the Trust can result in substantial fees and costs.  Trustees charge fees for their service, and many trustees hire attorneys and accountants.  These costs are paid by the Trust before beneficiaries receive their inheritances.



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Durable Power of Attorney Guidelines

How much power should your “attorney-in-fact” have?

In reality, more than you probably think…

  1. Banking: accounts, lock boxes
  2. Retirement: deal with companies and retirement accounts
  3. Mail: open, respond (i.e. pay bills), PO boxes, mail drops
  4. Insurance: accept payments, make settlements
    • Do you want them to be able to buy life insurance for you?
  5. Taxes: deal with the state and IRS
  6. Veterans Administration: deal with the VA
  7. Gifting: Usually only for Medicaid planning

The second thing to consider, is what are things I enjoy doing.  Do like fishing? Hunting? Golf?

Be sure to tell your planning attorney these things so they can be put in the durable power of attorney.



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