Wills
Trusts
Questions to Consider
If you are
unsure if you need professional help in accomplishing your estate
planning goals, consider whether the following scenarios are
provided for in your current documents.
Trusts accomplish what wills
cannot
In estate planning, a lawyer is often asked about trusts. Clients are often predisposed against them and instead ask only for a "simple will." There is no such thing as a simple will!
The following list outlines some of the things a trust can do—things a so-called simple will ordinarily cannot do.
A trust may include many different
provisions to accommodate one or more of the following objectives,
among others:
· Provide a structured way to
administer personal and financial affairs during your life should
you become incapacitated.
· Carry out your choice of
trustee to administer your
trust.
· Provide a protected way to
administer your assets to a surviving spouse in a tax-advantaged
manner.
· Ensure the orderly and
private transfer of your property after your death, and after the
death of your surviving spouse.
· Protect and manage assets
for the benefit of, and provide support for, your children,
grandchildren and other beneficiaries until they reach the ages or
meet conditions that you determine for
distribution.
· Create incentives for
desirable behavior and accomplishments by your
beneficiaries.
· Ensure that a property
transfer takes advantage of the available federal and state tax
exemptions.
· Provide for the support of
an elderly surviving spouse, parent, disabled child or other person
with protection from Medicaid disqualification or
reimbursement.
· Pay for a loved one’s
education.
· Pay for a loved one’s health
and medical care.
· Avoid probate costs and
inconvenience.
· Make tax-advantaged gifts to
children or others.
· Make tax-advantaged
generation-skipping gifts to
grandchildren.
· Protect assets from a
beneficiary’s creditor’s claims.
·
Protect assets from
claims of a beneficiary’s present, former or future spouse,
including in a divorce.
· Minimize the risk of
competition or disagreement among beneficiaries over financial
matters.
· Arrange for the cooperative
sharing of a family asset such as a residence or vacation
home.
· Determine the method for
decisions regarding stock options and other unusual
assets.
· Make tax-advantaged
charitable gifts.
· Arrange for the management
and distribution of retirement plans and life insurance
proceeds.
· Provide for the continuation
of alimony, property division or child support payments, if
necessary, but no more than is legally
required.
· Arrange for the management
or sale of a family business or save a family business from an
untimely liquidation or disadvantageous
sale.
· Reduce your estate tax,
income tax and generation skipping
tax.
The
terms of a revocable living trust can be modified as your goals
change. You can elect to have the trust cease and pay out
immediately following death or have it continue into the future for
your beneficiaries. The flexibility of a trust makes it ideal for a
wide range of individuals and purposes when a will cannot accomplish
your goals.
By
Daniel J. Hoffheimer, an attorney with Taft, Stettinius &
Hollister in