Estate Planning Goals
Estate planning focuses on the disposition of your assets after your death, but it can also involve planning for the use of your assets for your care if you become unable to manage your own affairs during your lifetime. Your estate planning objectives may include the desire to:
- Make sure that assets are transferred to your intended beneficiaries;
- Reduce estate administration costs, such as attorneys’ fees, executors’ fees, and court costs;
- Reduce or eliminate federal gift, estate, and generation-skipping taxes;
- Protect beneficiaries from mismanagement and from the claims of creditors and ex-spouses;
- Discourage certain types of conduct; and/or
- Give incentives to beneficiaries to be productive members of society.
Basic Estate Planning Tools
There are many "tools" that you can use to implement your estate plan. Such tools include ownership of assets with a right of survivorship, beneficiary designations, powers of attorney, irrevocable living trusts, homestead declarations, but the foundation of a solid estate plan will be a will or a revocable living trust. Unless all aspects of the estate plan are coordinated, some of the "tools" can cause more problems than they solve.
Last Will and Testament.
Generally: A will is a document in which the maker, ("Testator" or "Testatrix") can direct the administration and distribution of his or her estate. When you prepare your will, you must specify the fiduciaries and the beneficiaries, which are discussed below. Your estate planning attorney will provide the relevant technical language relating to the administration of the estate and the powers of the fiduciaries.
Advantages: A will has several advantages when compared to living trusts or asset ownership which is transferred by right of survivorship or under a contractual beneficiary designation.
Nevada’s minimum requirements are easy to meet. A formal will can be attested by two witnesses, who should not be named as executor or as a beneficiary. A handwritten will which has been dated, written, and signed entirely in the maker’s handwriting is legally valid in Nevada.
A will effects all assets that belong to you at the time of your death. No special form of ownership is required (although the will has no effect on assets which pass by operation of law or contract, as discussed in the introduction, above).
You can designate alternate fiduciaries and alternate beneficiaries, which is difficult to do effectively under contract beneficiary designations and impossible to do under any form of joint ownership with a right of survivorship.
A will is simpler than a revocable living trust, and is usually significantly less expensive to have professionally prepared. Because many attorneys expect to make money probating your will, their fee or hourly rate for will preparation may be less than their rate or fees for other legal work.
Testamentary Trusts: If your will delays the distribution to one or more beneficiaries until they reach a specified age or some other event, your will includes a "testamentary trust." A will with a testamentary trust is not a "simple will", and the preparation costs can be similar to those for revocable living trusts. After the will is probated and the administration of the probate estate is complete, the testamentary trust receives the assets allocated to it. Testamentary trusts are subject to continuing court supervision beyond the probate proceeding. The Trustee has to file an accounting with the court annually, and a court hearing is required at least every three years (and sometimes every year). This results in continuing costs until the beneficiaries’ shares are finally distributed.
Guardianship and Probate: A will does not alleviate the need for a guardian and will require probate upon your death. If you become unable to take care of yourself or your assets, your will can name the guardian, but it does not alleviate the court-supervised guardianship proceeding. Upon your death, probate proceedings are required to transfer those of your assets which do not pass directly by law or contract. Court costs, executors’ commissions, and attorneys’ fees can consume five to seven percent of an estate, and even an uncontested probate takes about six months to complete.
Revocable Trust
Generally: A revocable inter vivos ("living") trust is essentially a contract in which a person (the "settlor") transfers his or her assets to a person (the "trustee") who agrees to own, administer, and distribute those assets (the "trust estate") to designated persons (the "beneficiaries") according to the provisions of the written trust instrument ("Declaration of Trust" or "Trust Agreement"). Initially, the settlor, the trustee, and the beneficiary are usually the same person, and the trust names successor trustees and successor beneficiaries.
Benefits: The primary benefits of a trust are as follows:
- Avoid Probate: Assets held in the name of a trustee are not subject to probate upon the death of either the settlor or the trustee (even if you are both the settlor and the trustee of your own trust). The expense and delays associated with probate proceedings are avoided as to trust assets.
- Avoid Guardianship Proceedings: A trust can provide that the designated successor trustee will manage the assets and provide for the care of the settlor when the settlor becomes incapacitated or incompetent. A trustee can be directed to retain funds for beneficiaries who are young or immature, incompetent, unwise, or easily influenced by greedy people. This eliminates guardianship proceedings, including the annual court accountings required by law. If done properly, a beneficiary cannot compel an early distribution of—and his creditors cannot place a lien on—trust assets.
- Other Benefits: A revocable trust can be used to consolidate all of the settlor’s assets, including benefits from life insurance policies, retirement benefit plans, and other contracts. It can include provisions which optimize the marital deduction, charitable gifts, and generation-skipping transfers in order to reduce or eliminate a settlor’s federal gift and estate taxes. A trust can be used as a form of a marital property agreement if established after a marriage, or it can help segregate separate property if established before a marriage.
The above article is reproduced from Layne Rushforth’s Estate Planning Pages, with permission of the author. For more on basic and advanced estate planning, visit Layne T. Rushforth’s web site at http://rushforth.net/
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