Showing posts with label executor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label executor. Show all posts

Thursday, May 25, 2017

Choosing Non-relatives over Relatives as Your Beneficiaries?

Summary: When you decide to create a legacy that favors non-relatives over relatives, there are several possible risks involved. One is that your relatives will decide to challenge your plans in court. Another is that, depending on how you go about making your distributions, you could create possibly harmful tax implications for your estate and your beneficiaries. Proper estate planning may be able to help you minimize or avoid some or all of these risks. Your estate planning attorney can help show you what techniques will best serve your objectives. 

Calvin was a single man living in Colorado. Near the end of his life, one of the primary things on Calvin’s mind was who would own his home after he died. Eventually, Calvin decided to sign a deed that gave the property to three of his closest friends. When Calvin died, he had no estate plan -- no living trust and no will. This meant that Calvin‘s estate would pass according to Colorado’s intestacy laws.

Colorado’s intestate succession rules, like most states, seek to distribute assets to the closest living relatives of the deceased person. Calvin had no living spouse or children. In fact, his closest living relative (under the standards of the intestacy laws) was his half-sister. This was true because the statute only looks at levels of kinship, not personal relationships. In real life, Calvin and his half-sister were far from close. They last spoke at their father’s funeral, which took place more than 20 years before Calvin died. Nevertheless, the half-sister asked the probate to name her as the personal representative of Calvin’s estate, and the court granted the request.

After becoming the personal representative, the half-sister sued to invalidate the deed Calvin executed transferring his house. The deed was executed before Calvin died, meaning that the house was not part of his intestate estate. However, if the court wiped out the deed, then the ownership would revert back to his estate and would go to his sole legal heir, the half-sister.

Ultimately, the friends prevailed in the courts. The trial court stated that the half-sister’s case was “groundless” and backed up by a “dearth of evidence.”

In this case, the deceased man’s estate planning goals were upheld. His planning, as limited as it was, involved getting his home into the hands of his three friends, which was what happened in the end. Whether Calvin had executed a deed a few months before his death, or a will a few months before his death, the legal standard would have been the same: did he or did he not have testamentary capacity when he signed the document?

Nevertheless, Calvin’s approach was still less than ideal. Simply giving his home to his friends by signing a deed meant that the friends lost the possibility to receive the “stepped up basis” in the home. This loss could be costly if they chose to sell the property, as it would likely mean that they would owe a much greater amount of capital gains taxes. Additionally, simply deeding over the home could also have potentially negative gift tax implications, as well. Had Calvin merely executed a will or a living trust that directed his trust or estate to transfer the home to the three friends, Calvin could have achieved the same goal without same degree of potentially harmful tax implications.

         

This article is published by the Legacy Assurance Plan and is intended for general informational purposes only. Some information may not apply to your situation. It does not, nor is it intended, to constitute legal advice. You should consult with an attorney regarding any specific questions about probate, living probate or other estate planning matters. Legacy Assurance Plan is an estate planning services-company and is not a lawyer or law firm and is not engaged in the practice of law. For more information about this and other estate planning matters visit our website at www.legacyassuranceplan.com

This article written and published by:
8039 Cooper Creek Blvd
University Park, Florida 34201
844.306.5272 (Phone)
@assuranceplan
#legacyassuranceplan



Thursday, April 20, 2017

Take Care to Choose Wisely in Selecting Your Executor or Successor Trustee


Summary: There are a number of very important decisions you have to make as part of the creation of an estate plan. One of the most important is the selection of your executor or successor trustee. Whether you choose one person or several people serving together will depend on the specifics of your family. Your estate planning attorney can help you sort through the benefits and drawbacks of all of your options.

When you begin the process of contemplating who should be your executor or successor trustee, it is important to select someone who is best equipped to carry out the instructions you’ve laid out in your plan. To help in this process, it is useful to avoid any possible confusion or misconceptions about the process of selecting your executor or successor trustee.

Don’t make the mistake of thinking that you have to choose only one person. This is definitely untrue. Each family is different and so, the person or people serving in this capacity will look differently. For some families, there may be one person who is uniquely well-suited to take on these responsibilities. Perhaps, for example, among your group of children, there is one who has the closest relationship with you, lives the closest to you geographically and also has the strongest acumen when it comes to business, legal and financial matters. For a family like this, it may make sense to name this child as both your executor and your first successor trustee.

In a lot of families, though, this will not be the case. You may have one child who lives nearby while a different one has the greatest legal and financial skill. In this example, you may want to consider making both of these children co-executors or co-trustees. It is very important to make sure that, if you name multiple people to serve at the same time, that they are people who can work together successfully to ensure the most efficient carrying out of your instructions.

You should also take care to name alternates in the event that your most preferred people cannot serve, whether due to their death, illness of other reasons. Naming second and third alternates helps to ensure that your plan will not be saddled with needing a judge to name someone to serve. This will cause delay, expense and may result in someone serving whom you didn’t want.

Another thing to keep in mind is that, depending on where you live, the person or people you want to serve as your executor (or one co-executor) may be ineligible. Some states have rules that limit executors to people who are residents of that state, or who make non-residents jump through extra procedural hoops in order to serve. One thing to keep in mind is that there are no similar rules restricting who may serve as the trustee of your living trust.

If the person or people you prefer live in a different state from you then, depending on where you reside, this may be another good reason to look at the possible advantages of including a revocable living trust in your estate plan. Selecting the documents to go in your plan, as well as the people to carry out the instructions of your plan, is one of the many pieces of the estate planning puzzle that your estate planning attorney can help you as you sort through the “plusses” and “minuses” of each option.

This article is published by the Legacy Assurance Plan and is intended for general informational purposes only. Some information may not apply to your situation. It does not, nor is it intended, to constitute legal advice. You should consult with an attorney regarding any specific questions about probate, living probate or other estate planning matters. Legacy Assurance Plan is an estate planning services-company and is not a lawyer or law firm and is not engaged in the practice of law. For more information about this and other estate planning matters visit our website at www.legacyassuranceplan.com

This article written and published by:
8039 Cooper Creek Blvd
University Park, Florida 34201
844.306.5272 (Phone)
@assuranceplan
#legacyassuranceplan