Friday, August 27, 2010

Ten Estate Planning Traps and How to Avoid Them

By Joseph Karp
If you're thinking about setting up an estate plan, you probably want to accomplish one or more of the following goals:
* Protect your assets in the event you become disabled.
* Create as trauma-free a transition as possible for your loved ones when you pass away.
* Control your medical destiny.

* Pass on as much of your hard-earned assets as possible to loved ones.
* Leave a legacy of family harmony.

Even with the best of intentions, however, there are many estate planning traps that can sabotage your goals. Below are ten common estate planning mistakes that can undermine your estate plan, and advice on how to avoid them. Remember, your estate plan will speak for you when you cannot, so it's imperative to get it right. Always seek the guidance of a certified elder law/estate planning attorney.

MISTAKE 1: Permitting the provisions of your will to conflict with the beneficiary designations of your assets.
Why it's a mistake: Your beneficiary designations trump your will. For example, if your will says that your two children will share everything equally, but you name only one child as the beneficiary of your largest asset, that child will inherit the asset in its entirety. That's not much of a foundation for family harmony!
How to avoid it: Review all your beneficiary designations, and make sure they are in synch with your will.

MISTAKE 2: Believing that your will provides protection if you become disabled.

Why it's a mistake: A will is a death instrument only. Basically, it's a blueprint that describes who will get what asset after you're gone. A will has absolutely no impact on what happens if you become incapacitated. If you haven't made legal provisions for incapacity and you become incapable of making your own personal, financial and medical decisions, you could find yourself the subject of a costly court guardianship.

How to avoid it: Create a health care surrogate (health care power of attorney) to ensure that if you become incapacitated, someone you know and trust can make your medical decisions. Create a Durable Power of Attorney appointing someone to make your financial decisions, or alternatively, create and fund a revocable living trust.

MISTAKE 3: Making one or more children co-owners of your assets in order to avoid probate of the asset.

Why it's a mistake: Even if you have implicit faith in your child's integrity, if he/she runs into financial difficulties, your child's creditors could go after your assets. Co-ownership also means that after you die, that asset will belong to your child, which may be in conflict with your will or trust (see Mistake #1).

How to avoid it: You may make your child a beneficiary of your asset, or allow the asset to pass to your child through your will or trust.

MISTAKE 4: Creating a living trust (aka revocable trust) but failing to transfer your assets into it.

Why it's a mistake: A revocable trust can offer many benefits - for example, probate avoidance - but it remains just a piece of paper until it is "funded." Funding means that the trust actually owns your assets. (Note: Certain assets should not go into your living trust while you're alive, but may pass into your trust when you pass away. Examples of such assets are your 401k, 403b or IRA.)

How to avoid it: Consult your elder law attorney about what assets belong in your trust. Then contact your financial institutions to retitle the appropriate assets into the name of your revocable trust.

MISTAKE 5: Leaving specific assets to specific people.

Why it's a mistake: Other than certain pieces of personal property - jewelry, for example - it's generally a bad idea to leave certain assets to certain people. The reason: the value of the asset may fluctuate, skewing the value of what gets passed down to your heirs. By way of example, let's save you want your son and daughter to share your estate equally. You leave your $200,000 house to your son and your brokerage account of $200,000 to your daughter. However, over time, if the value of one or the other asset changes, your children could end up getting significantly unequal shares of your estate.

How to avoid it: Generally speaking, it's better to leave your heirs percentages of assets rather than specific assets.

MISTAKE 6: Assuming that your child with the most business experience is the best candidate to serve as your Personal Representative, Trustee, or Agent.

Why it's a mistake: Most people appoint one or more of their adult children as fiduciaries, but overestimate the importance of business acumen. In reality, of equal or greater importance is general trustworthiness, and having the time to do the job properly. For example, the fact that your daughter is an accomplished CPA is fine -- but if she has a demanding job and young children, and lives at a great distance, serving as your Personal Representative may prove too much of a burden for her. Her selection could also stoke family tension if she cannot attend to her duties on a timely basis, thus delaying the distribution of assets to beneficiaries.

How to avoid it: Talk to whomever you are thinking about appointing as a fiduciary to determine if they are willing and able to serve. In some cases, it may be better to appoint a third-party fiduciary like a bank or brokerage trust department. A third-party fiduciary may also be a good idea if you want to avoid the discord that can arise when a parent designates one child as a fiduciary, thereby giving that one child "the power of the purse" over his/her siblings.

MISTAKE 7: Assuming that Medicare will pick up the tab for a nursing home if you ever need long-term care.

Why it's a mistake: Contrary to common belief, Medicare does not pay for long-term care, but only for skilled nursing care on a limited basis. Given greater longevity, more and more of us will require long-term care at some point in our lives - and the astronomical expense can wipe out the average family in no time. Thus, planning for this eventuality should a cornerstone of most people's estate plans.

How to avoid it: Long-term care insurance can be a good investment. However, if you cannot afford it or if you cannot qualify for health reasons, assets may often be preserved with strategies that incorporate Medicaid planning and/or Veterans benefits planning into your estate plan. Consult a certified elder law attorney for advice.

MISTAKE 8: Thinking that your will allows your estate to avoid probate.

Why it's a mistake: When you die, any assets passing under your will must go through the probate court. The probate court will then direct the distribution of your assets to the beneficiaries named in your will, ensure creditors are paid, etc.

How to avoid it: If one of your estate planning goals is to keep your estate out of probate, a will is not the way to go. Instead, consider a revocable trust (aka living trust).

MISTAKE 9: Thinking that if your estate is not taxable, it avoids probate.

Why it's a mistake: It's a common misconception that only taxable must go through probate. The reality is that the need for probate and an estate's tax status are unrelated. A modest estate not subject to estate tax may go through probate if the decedent relied on a will to transfer assets. A large, taxable estate may not be probated if the decedent utilized effective probate-avoidance strategies such as a living trust (aka revocable trust).

How to avoid it: Regardless of the size of your estate, a will is not the estate planning vehicle of choice for anyone intent on making sure his family avoids dealing with the probate court. Other estate planning strategies should be investigated with the advice of a certified elder law/estate planning attorney.

MISTAKE 10: Relying on a do-it-yourself websites or books to draft your documents, in order to save money.

Why it's a mistake: The do-it-yourself sites and books disclaim any liability; in fact, they advise you to check with an attorney! Remember, if you get your estate plan wrong, the errors will probably not be discovered until after you're gone. And then, there are no do-overs!.

How to avoid it: See an experienced and certified elder law attorney in the state in which you reside. The Florida Bar certifies lawyers in elder law, as do many other states. Also, the National Elder Law Foundation certifies elder law attorneys nationally - it is the only body authorized by the American Bar Association to confer this credential.
READ MORE - Ten Estate Planning Traps and How to Avoid Them

Estate Tax Basics - If Only it Were Like Monopoly

By Pablo Palomino
Explaining the basics of Federal estate taxes and how estate plans address these taxes.
Have you ever played Monopoly and collected a $100 inheritance from the Community Chest cards? If only it were that easy - collect an inheritance, no taxes, no liabilities, just a simple payout. Unfortunately, our estate will be taxed, and this is why so many aspects of an estate plan deal with reducing taxes.

Estate tax is the IRS's way of taxing you for the right to transfer property. In the past, this tax has been applied to any assets over a certain value. In 2009, that value was $3.5 million, so if your estate was valued at $5 million, your heirs would pay taxes on the $1.5 million excess. Now that may sound like quite a bit of money, but considering all assets of an estate - a home, vehicles, bank accounts, stock and retirement plans, that amount may not be so much after all.

In 2010, the federal estate tax was phased out completely, but only for the year. Unless Congress passes a new law before the end of the year, the estate tax will be reinstated in 2011 at a threshold of just $1 million.

In the past, many have chosen to simply leave their entire estate to their spouse, because gifts and bequests to your spouse are not taxed at all. But even despite the great tax breaks, this may not be the best tactic for future generations, as you are increasing your spouse's taxable estate, which may place a large tax burden when the surviving spouse passes. It also does not make good use of the estate tax threshold mentioned above.

There are several ways to address the federal estate tax law, and it should be a consideration when you begin an estate plan. For example, certain monetary gifts are not taxed, and can help reduce your estate, such as an annual monetary gift of $13,000 to an individual or paying the medical bills of an individual (as long as payment is made directly to the provider or institution rather than the individual).

An attorney that specializes in estate planning is well versed on the Federal tax laws and can help navigate these tricky waters. In the meantime, do not pass Go, do not collect $200....
READ MORE - Estate Tax Basics - If Only it Were Like Monopoly

Isolation in Nursing Homes

By David S Caldwell
According to the Department of Health and Human Services, an exorbitant percentage of nursing home facilities do not meet the standards set out by said agency. These facilities are inspected annually to determine their deficiencies. Interestingly, both government operated and privately owned facilities exhibited this trend of a high percentage of deficiency. In 2007,

over 90% of facilities in both categories did not meet the government standards in place for the safety and best care of their residents.

Many of the complaints lobbied against assisted living facilities fall under the category of resident neglect. Resident neglect and abuse accounted for nearly 20% of the substantiated complaints that were filed between 2005 and 2007. One of the pressing types of neglect and abuse that is demonstrated in nursing homes is involuntary seclusion, often referred to as isolation.

Isolation is used as an inhumane method of disciplining residents of these facilities. Loneliness is a frequent struggle for many of the elderly because of natural passive circumstances. With the advancement of years, comes the natural decrease of close friends, loved ones, and peers. Though these losses are natural, they are not easy on anyone.

Loss of camaraderie can be heightened by a physical or mental disability. The role of a caregiver should be to combat those disabilities through intentional socialization and activity. This is one of the primary benefits and responsibilities of an assisted living facility. That benefit is inhumanely denied by the practice of forced, involuntary seclusion of residents. These residents, who are often dependent on their caregivers, should not be forced into isolation by negligent practices of caregivers.
READ MORE - Isolation in Nursing Homes

Types of Power of Attorney

By Greer Nathkin
Using a power of attorney for estate planning
We all make decisions about ourselves and our dependents. But often people do not take into account what might happen if they are unable to make those decisions. An estate planning law firm helps you plan for those instances in which you are unable to make decisions for yourself.

An essential tool in estate planning is a power of attorney. A power of attorney is a commonly used, written document authorizing one person to make certain decisions, usually financial, on behalf of another person. There are two types:

* Agent or Attorney in Fact: The person you are designating to make decisions for you if you are incapacitated.
* Principal: The individual on whose behalf the agent works.

Creating a power of attorney is important for anyone with property, income, or other assets. Most people do not expect to become incapacitated when they are younger. A power of attorney is a smart tool to plan for when we are older. Different types of power of attorney include:

* Durable power of attorney: Becomes effective as soon as the document is signed and continues to be effective if the principal becomes incapacitated.
* Springing power of attorney: Becomes effective only upon declaration of the principal as mentally incapacitated.
* Medical power of attorney: Empowers your agent to make healthcare decisions on your behalf if you are unable to communicate or are physically incapacitated.

Designating an agent provides someone to step up when you cannot. An agent can be paid for their services, but only if that payment is described in the power of attorney itself. Types of transactions an agent are expected to perform include:

* Managing finances and assets, including bill payment
* Signing necessary legal documents
* Making necessary significant financial decisions on your behalf
* Making ongoing or acute medical decisions on your behalf

Choosing an agent, either financial or medical, to act on your behalf may be one of the most important decisions of your later life. Consider these points when selecting your designee:

* Financial management skill: Is your choice skilled and organized with money?
* Age: Choose someone over 18.
* Locality: Is your choice close enough to help you?

Use an agent to look after yourself and your finances. An agent can make decisions easily now, but there may come a time when we cannot. Estate planning law firms can help prepare for those times when you cannot.
READ MORE - Types of Power of Attorney