Prudent Planning

October 28, 2008

Keeping it in the Family

You may be hearing daily from family, friends, financial advisors, and the talking heads of every cable news station about the turbulence of our current economy. You may feel by turns worried, confused, and uncertain.

However, with the right team on your side, you and your family will weather this storm. Instead of keeping constant vigil with the 24-hour news and financial networks – talk with you advisors. You’ll get a realistic assessment of your situation, helpful ideas about what to do right now, and a welcome respite from many in the media who look for ways to boost your tension and, thus, their ratings.

Most of the factors contributing to our current economic situation are beyond our control. There are, however, things you can do to assure that you, your family, and your assets are protected now and in the future. At Smith Barid, we find that helping people take control of the things they can control creates true peace of mind.

One of the important things you can control is what happens with the legacy you’ve worked so hard to create once it passes to your children and grandchildren. We all acknowledge that the divorce rate in our country is staggeringly high. If one of the loved ones you leave behind finds themselves in the middle of a divorce, will some or all of your hard-earned assets leave the family along with the soon-to-be ex?

Divorce (a major part of what many call Family Law) is a complex, and often difficult, process. One of our local Superior Courts (the courts in GA which handle divorce matters) just released an attorneys’ guide to property division in divorce. The memo is 14 pages, single-spaced, with 8 footnotes. This isn’t simple stuff. It is important to know, however, that the only assets divided by a judge or jury (Yes, GA still allows juries in divorce cases!) in a divorce are marital assets.

Proper planning done now can prevent your hard-earned assets from becoming marital assets of your children. That is to say, the right kind of revocable living trust or testamentary trusts will allow you to pass your legacy to the next generation without those assets being subject to division in a future divorce.

A qualified estate planning attorney will help you to seize the reins of your legacy, control what you can control, and find your bearings in this transient maelstrom of anxiety-ridden news stories.

August 8, 2007

Protecting Your Kids with Proper Planning

Your children mean the world to you. You’ve done everything within your power to meet their needs and to ward off dangers. You keep a watchful eye out for them, whether they’re swimming in the ocean or wandering too close to the edge of the Grand Canyon. You provide for their needs, from putting food on the table to buying new clothes for school.

We cannot protect our children from every risk in life. When they grow up, they will make some mistakes, just as we did. However, we can afford them some financial protection by leaving their inheritance in trust.

A trust can help because it holds legal title to assets, even though as beneficiary, your child will hold beneficial title. By leaving your assets to your child in a “Family Access Trust,” he or she could still get to the assets at any time. He or she could even remove all the assets from the trust, if desired. Yet, while assets remain in the trust, the trust can protect the assets from your child’s divorcing spouse and, in most states, keeps your child’s future ex-spouse from taking your child’s inheritance.

A Family Access Trust will not act to protect assets from other creditors, however. In order to accomplish that goal, you need a “Family Sentry Trust,” which is a discretionary trust for the benefit of your child. Distributions to your child are made by the person (Trustee) you appoint to make decisions for the trust.

Your child could be a Co-Trustee, but could not act alone to make distributions. Your child could be named as the Investment Trustee and, in that capacity, could direct how the assets are invested. A Family Sentry Trust protects your child from most of their creditors, subject to state law. An additional benefit is that, with a Family Sentry Trust, the assets are not taxed to your child’s estate for estate tax purposes.

You’ve spent your life building your legacy. That legacy will become your child’s inheritance. Keep that inheritance from being attached by future ex-spouses or other creditors. A qualified estate planning attorney can help you provide for your children, and not their creditors.

For more helpful information about estate planning, please visit www.smithbarid.com.

July 11, 2007

Decisions . . . Decisions . . . Decisions . . .

When asked how people want their assets divided after they are gone, some people have definite opinions, while others are less certain. Not only do people differ in the level of their uncertainty concerning how to divvy up their assets, they even differ in what factors are important in making the decision.

In June 2007, Money magazine released a reader poll concerning various financial issues. The following percentages of respondents ranked each factor as very important:

  • Dividing the estate equally among your children: 69%
  • How responsible each child is about money: 37%
  • How helpful each child has been to you: 29%
  • How close you are to each child: 22%
  • How much money each child has: 22%
  • How many children of their own each child has: 19%
  • How much you like each child’s spouse: 10%
  • 37% said it can be reasonable to disinherit a child.

Another item of indecision for many people is the choice of decision makers: Trustee, Personal Representative, Guardian, and Agents under powers of attorney. For each of these positions, it is important to name people whose decision-making ability you trust. You may be tempted to name all your children or siblings to avoid hurting anyone’s feelings. However, naming a large number of people to serve together in the same role invites family disharmony and chaos. For example, if property in the Trust is to be sold and you have seven Trustees, many of whom may be out of town, it would be a logistical nightmare to route paperwork all around the country. Typically, things work more smoothly if you limit the number of people in any given role. Besides, having a job thrust upon them may be something many would just as soon avoid.

Regardless of what factors are important to you, a qualified estate planning attorney can help you achieve your goals. For example, if you are concerned about your child’s ability to manage finances, the money can be left in a Trust which will prevent him or her from accessing the funds without the permission of a person whom you designate, the Trustee. If you do not like your child’s spouse and are concerned he or she might divorce your child and take some of the inheritance you leave your child, you can leave your assets in a “Divorce Protection Trust.” Such a Trust keeps the assets separate from marital assets. Therefore, it minimizes the risk of the assets ending up in the hands of the child’s future ex-spouse.

A qualified estate planning attorney can help you achieve your goals while paving the way for your family’s continued success and harmony after you are gone.

April 5, 2007

Protecting Your Children from Their Nightmares…and Yours

Filed under: Basic Estate Planning, Children, Divorce, Living Trust, Marriage, Minor Children, planning — Richard Barid @ 2:17 pm

You tuck your children into bed and kiss them goodnight. In the doorway, you watch them drift peacefully off to sleep. They are so innocent, so naïve. After your long day, you fall into bed and dream of the day your children will be grown. You dream you are walking your daughter down the aisle at her wedding, beaming with pride. Your dream starts out normally, but then you see that your soon-to-be son-in-law is actually a chimpanzee.

While our dreams can be a stage for many bizarre fears, this one is fairly logical. No, it’s not likely that your daughter will marry a chimpanzee. However, we have reason to be mindful of our children getting into bad marriages destined to end in divorce. In the United States, the rate of divorce is up dramatically from one or two generations ago. The rate of divorce is more than double the rate in 1940 and is up 86% from 1960. Nearly half of all marriages in the United States end in divorce.

Is it possible that your children or their descendants could be a party to a divorce? Definitely. So, how can you protect your children in the event of their divorce? A living trust. First, upon your death, you can leave assets to your children in a “divorce protection” trust. Such a trust allows your child to keep his or her inheritance from being considered marital property or community property. Your child can still be in charge of the money. He or she can be the trustee and can make decisions on the management and investment of the money. Even if the child is not the trustee, he or she may have the power to pull money out of the trust.

In addition to protecting your child in the event of his or her divorce, you can also protect them from the event of your marriage ending. If you remarry (especially if your spouse is not the parent of your children), you can ensure that your children are provided for after your death. Rather than leaving all of your assets outright to your spouse at your death, you can leave those assets in a trust.

You can leave up to $2 million (in 2007) in a “Family Trust” for the benefit of the spouse and/or children. This trust can pay income or principal for the needs of the spouse and/or children. Anything over that amount can be left in a “Marital Trust,” paying all income to the spouse. The Marital Trust could be dipped into for the needs of the spouse, or you could provide the spouse with income only. Either way, whatever is left over would be there for the kids and would not go to a new spouse.

You may not have control over your daughter marrying a chimpanzee, or even someone who acts like one. However, you can protect her inheritance so that she will be able to recover financially after a breakup. A qualified estate planning attorney can help you protect your children from divorces (www.smithbarid.com).

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