Archive for the ‘Estates’ Category

Trusts Series Part IV: Revocable and Irrevocable Trusts

Tuesday, August 7th, 2012

In a previous part of this series we discussed forms of trusts and introduced the inter vivos trust. Inter vivos trusts are any trust created by a donor while he or she is still alive. This is a very general description and inter vivos trusts can come in numerous types and contain many different provisions based on the intent behind the creation of the trust. With this part of the series we will begin to narrow down the types of trusts and the provisions in those trusts.

 

One of the first decisions that must be made in regard to the creation of a trust is whether it will be revocable or irrevocable. The revocability of a trust refers to the donor’s ability to change provisions in the trust or eliminate the trust completely and take the assets and property back. The creation of a revocable trusts grants the donor these rights, this allows for more control over the trust after its execution, but it will lack some of the benefits that an irrevocable trust offers.

 

In a revocable trust, a donor is still deemed to have enough control over the assets in the trust to still have ownership rights. Revocable trusts generally do not offer the asset protection benefits of irrevocable trusts and are more often used in estate planning to avoid the probate of an estate. As mentioned in the previous part to this series, entitled “Trust Forms,” trusts of this nature can be used to pass property in an easier, cheaper, and more private manner. However, irrevocable trusts provide even more powerful benefits.

 

Irrevocable trusts generally remove the donor’s ability to change any provisions in a trust, remove or add beneficiaries of the trust, or dissolve the trust and take back the property within it. The trade off is that the donor is no longer considered to “own” the property in the trust. This means that the trust can be used to protect the assets in the trust from creditors, help to plan for Medicaid qualification, and potentially avoid estate taxes.

Trusts Series Part III: Trust Forms

Tuesday, July 24th, 2012

As stated in Part II of this series, trusts can be made by either oral or written means. Although oral trusts can be just as valid as written trusts they are often harder to prove as valid because there is no documentation to verify them. This section will focus primarily on the two main forms of written trusts, inter vivos and testamentary trusts.

 

Inter vivos trusts are any trusts created by a donor while he or she is alive. This is the most common form of trust.

 

Testamentary trusts are trusts that are created by a will. There may be instances where a testator wants to make a devise to someone, but he feels that that person may not be able to properly manage the assets. That person may be a minor, be mentally incapable, or may simply be bad with money. Testamentary trusts allow testators to make conditional and time delayed devises with more power and control than traditional will provisions.

 

The main disadvantage in the creation of testamentary trusts is the loss of the ability to avoid probate. Inter vivos trusts create a new legal entity to hold assets and property while the donor of that trust is still alive. So long as there are beneficiaries to the trust, the trust will remain active and valid after the donor’s death. Because of this continuation, any assets that are in an inter vivos trust at the time of death of a donor will not be considered part of his probate estate. If property is not part of a probate estate then it does not need to be probated after the death of the donor. The avoidance of probate allows a donor to pass on property after death in an easier, cheaper, and more private manner.

 

Probate Series Part I: What is Probate?

Tuesday, July 17th, 2012

One of the main goals of estate planning for many individuals is the avoidance of probate. People will often consult an estate planning attorney and request this outcome without fully understanding what probate is. This weekly series will attempt to clarify some of the misunderstandings about probate, and shed some light on the recent changes brought about by the adoption of the Massachusetts Uniform Probate Code.

 

Generally speaking, probate is the court-supervised administration of one’s estate. The property that a person owns at the time of his or her death that is required to pass through probate is called the probate estate.

 

Probate involves the filing of a death certificate, the will (if one exists), a petition to appoint a personal representative, an inventory of the decedent’s probate estate, and the eventual distribution of the probate estate according to the provisions in the will or intestate distribution if no valid will exists. While seemingly straightforward, probating a will can potentially involve long and expensive proceedings if complications arise during the process.

 

This series will cover the details of the probate process in further detail as the weeks progress. For more information regarding wills, please refer to the Wills Series on this website.

Trusts Part II: Creation of a Trust

Tuesday, July 3rd, 2012

In general, the creation of a trust is significantly easier to prove than the creation of a will. In order to prove the existence of a valid trust one needs to only meet 3 requirements:

Intent – in order to prove the creation of a trust there must have been the initial intent to create the trust. This required intent can be manifested in many ways, it may be as simple as a spoken agreement or as complicated as a 50 page legal document.
Property – in order to be valid a trust must have property held within it. It is the trust’s purpose to provide for a beneficiary. If there is no property for the trustee to manage, there is nothing to provide to the beneficiary.
Beneficiary – valid trusts must have at least one identifiable and ascertainable beneficiary. Without a beneficiary the trustee has no reason to manage the property in the trust or person to distribute the trust assets to.

While these are the bare minimum requirements for the creation of a trust, trust creation as a whole is not nearly that simple. In order to achieve the intended benefits of particular trusts certain drafting requirements may need to be met. If these specific drafting requirements are not met a trust will likely still be created, but the trust may not carry all the added benefits intended in the drafting. This weekly series will cover the common forms and types of trusts available, as well as their intended uses and benefits.

Trusts Part I: What is a Trust?

Monday, June 18th, 2012

By its most basic definition a trust is an agreement by which one party gives control of property or assets to another for the benefit of a third party. Trusts can be used for numerous purposes including the passing of property outside of probate, the protection of assets from certain creditors, and the benefit of someone who is not responsible with money.

There are three main players in any given trust arrangement:

Donor – the person who creates the trust. The Donor is the one who funds the trust with property or assets, determines the rules and guidelines for the trust, and names the trustee and beneficiary under the trust. There can be one or more Donors to a trust. (The Donor can also be called the Settlor or Trustor)
Trustee – the person who manages the trust. The Trustee is a person named by the Donor to manage the property or assets that are placed into the trust. There can be one or more Trustees named under a trust.
Beneficiary – the person benefiting from the trust. The beneficiary is the person who is named to receive some payment of income or principle from the trust. There can be one or more beneficiaries named under a trust.

Under any number of circumstances a person may take more than one of these roles, depending on the ultimate purposes of the particular trust. Trusts come in many iterations, for the purposes of this series general trust provisions and types will be discussed with a focus on specific Massachusetts based laws and rulings.

Wills Part I: What is a will?

Tuesday, June 5th, 2012

By its most basic definition a will is a legal document that establishes the final wishes of a testator regarding the distribution of his estate after he dies. Among other things, wills allow individuals to make decisions regarding the distribution of their assets, the guardianship of minor children, and who will handle the distribution of their estate once they have died.

If a person dies without a will they are considered to have died intestate. When a person dies intestate his estate is distributed according to the default rules established in his home jurisdiction. Generally speaking, intestacy statutes call for the distribution of the deceased person’s estate to the closest living relatives which usually follows the order of spouse, descendants, parents, siblings, and so on.

The laws regarding wills can vary dramatically depending on jurisdiction. This weekly series will focus primarily on the laws of Massachusetts and the recently adopted Massachusetts Uniform Probate Code.

Strategic Use of Disclaimers

Wednesday, August 17th, 2011

This blog is intended to be a general overview of how one may strategically disclaim an interest in an inheritance, why they might do so, and the benefits to such a disclaimer. It will also touch briefly on the evolution of disclaimers from the old-English common law to the modern Uniform Probate Code. In order to properly discuss these issues we must first define and explain inheritance.

Basics

When a person dies they leave behind all the property that they once owned. This property is generally distributed in one of two main ways; either by will, or intestate distribution.
 
Testacy
If a person leaves behind a properly drafted and executed will then they are said to have died testate. This will should outline exactly how the person wanted his or her property to be distributed after his death. Each person named to receive something in the will is called a devisee and the gift left to him or her in the will is called an inheritance.
 
Intestacy
If a person does not leave a will, or does not leave a properly executed will he or she is said to have died intestate. The property that one leaves behind after dying intestate is passed on through something called intestate distribution. Although it may vary slightly depending on the jurisdiction essentially, intestate distribution passes one’s property to family members based on the closest relation, which could include spouses, children, parents, grandparents, siblings, etc. Each person entitled to a share of the property passing through intestate distribution is called an heir and his or her share of the estate is also called an inheritance.

Disclaimers

Although named in a will or eligible to collect through intestate distribution, one is not required to accept an inheritance and may refuse it; this refusal is called a disclaimer. When a person disclaims his interest in an inheritance it is treated as if the person pre-deceased the person who died and his share of the inheritance goes to another heir.  Disclaimers work exactly the same with distributions through trusts, as well.
With that basic information established we can now focus on why one would disclaim an interest in an inheritance and the benefits of doing so. The major reasons that one would consider disclaiming an inheritance are to avoid creditors, and  avoid, or lessen tax liabilities while keeping property in the family; or to simply avoid inheriting unwanted property.

Avoiding or Lessening Tax Liabilities

Under the English common law, there was no such thing as disclaiming an inheritance through intestate distribution; instead one could refuse the inheritance and it was then treated as if title to the inheritance passed through that heir before moving onto the next heir in line. While the end result was the same, the situation was treated as if the renouncing heir received the inheritance and then gifted it to the next heir; this created a tax liability in the renouncing heir, which they would still be responsible for paying, despite never receiving the property.
 
As mentioned earlier, when one disclaims an inheritance today they will generally not be responsible for the gift tax attached to the inheritance. Under the modern rules of inheritance established mainly by the general acceptance of the Uniform Probate Code, by treating the disclaiming heir as if they predeceased the decedent, we remove the tax liability and allow the inheritance to flow directly to the new heir without creating a tax liability in the disclaiming heir. Unless there is a specific line of distribution set out in a will or trust to account for a disclaimer to a specific piece of property the usual recipient of disclaimed property will typically be the disclaimer’s children.
 
The guidelines for properly disclaiming an interest in an inheritance in order to avoid the federal gift tax liability can be found in the Internal Revenue Code at §2518. IRC §2518 states that in order for a disclaimer to be a “qualified disclaimer” the disclaiming heir must make the refusal irrevocable and unqualified; in writing and delivered to the owner of the property, or legal representative no later than 9 months after the day the interest vested, or the disclaimant turns 21; and the disclaimant must never have accepted the property or any of its benefits. If these guidelines are properly followed then “the disclaimer causes the disclaimed property to pass—without any direction from the disclaimant—to someone else.”
 
As stated above, in virtually all circumstances a proper disclaimer must be irrevocable, this is not always true however. In 2004 the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court allowed a woman to reform her previously “irrevocable” disclaimer to a trust in order to prevent her children—who the disclaimed interest passed to—from having to pay excessive taxes because of a Federal generation-skipping transfer tax exemption issue that she was unaware of prior to filing the disclaimer. The SJC reasoned “that a disclaimer may be reformed in circumstances…where there is decisive evidence of the decedent’s intent to minimize tax consequences and where that intent was clearly frustrated.”1
Generation-skipping transfer taxes are complex rules set up by the federal government in an attempt to stop people from avoiding estate/lifetime gift taxes by making strategic bequests that skip generations, such as gifting to grandchildren instead of children. For a more thorough explanation of the generation-skipping transfer tax please visit the article in the footnote.2

Avoiding Creditors

Disclaiming an inheritance can allow an heir to avoid having property lost to creditors while keeping it in the family. The majority of disclaimer statutes state that the disclaimer will date back to the exact time that the interest in the inheritance vested. Because of this, it is treated as if the disclaimant never had a right to the disclaimed property.  In these situations this means that any creditors attempting to collect on debts owed by the disclaimant cannot seize or attach liens to the property that the disclaimant refused and the property will pass, unattached and unburdened to the next heir.
 
Disclaiming an inheritance to avoid creditors is a powerful tool, however it is not a complete protection from all creditors. It has been established by case law that one cannot disclaim to avoid previously existing state or federal tax bills.3  In the context of bankruptcy law there has been a bit of a change in the last couple years regarding the disclaimer of inheritance. A recent Ninth Circuit, Court of Appeals case stated that in order for a trustee to be able to avoid a disclaimer and go after the disclaimed inheritance the bankruptcy court must determine whether state law holds that the person disclaiming had a property interest in the disclaimed gift. If state law says that no property interest existed after the disclaimer, then the bankruptcy trustee may not take the property on behalf of the unsecured creditors, despite the 2 year look-back period.4

Avoiding Unwanted Property

In some instances there may be a piece of property left through a will or intestate distribution that simply is not wanted. This is perhaps best illustrated with a hypothetical: A dies, leaving her last possessions, a run-down house and all the property therein to her only surviving heir B. The only problem is that A was a pack rat and the house is filled with tons of worthless trash and newspapers from 20 years ago. It’s so bad that it would cost more money to clean the house out and bring it up to code than it would make once it was sold on the market.
 
What is B to do?
Well in this instance B can disclaim her inheritance and avoid the hassle of dealing with the struggle and expense of cleaning and fixing up the old house only to lose money on it once it could be sold. In this instance, if B truly is the only heir that A left behind the house and everything else would likely escheat.
Property will escheat if a person dies with no heirs to receive their property. When this happens the state takes possession of the escheated property and may dispose of it as it chooses.
 
While not always a perfect solution, the disclaimer of a gift can prove to be a powerful tool to the savvy estate planner. When properly implemented it can help to avoid large tax liabilities and prevent unwanted seizure by most creditors while keeping property in the family or to simply avoid an unwanted gift altogether. Whatever the intended purpose, all of the consequences of a disclaimer should be considered before making determining to make one. It is also always advisable to consult with a trusted CPA when dealing with any type of tax liability.

1 Kaufman v. Richmond, 442 Mass. 1010, (2004)
 
2 The Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax: A Quick Guide by Mark E. Powell, Esq.
http://www.journalofaccountancy.com/issues/2009/oct/20091804.htm
 
3 Drye v. United States, 528 U.S. 49, 1999
 
4 In re Costas, 555 F.3d 790 (2009)