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The
Family Fight In The Media
American
Medical News
Splitting
Heirs: Do's and Don'ts of Estate Planning
Planning ahead for the distribution
of your estate will ensure your wishes
are followed, and help keep your loved
ones out of court -- and away from
each other's throats -- after you
die.
Katherine Vogt
AMNews
Your
prized porcelain figurine could become
a divisive force in your family, pitting
siblings against each other, if you
don't have a will.
And
if the language in your will is vague,
the $49 statuette could become the
center of expensive litigation costing
your heirs thousands of dollars as
they battle for its ownership after
your death.
"Some
of the biggest fights I've seen in
my practice were over knickknacks
and china cabinets," said Les
Kotzer, a wills and estate attorney
in Toronto. "It sounds petty,
but these things destroy a family."
Experts
say basic estate planning can help
avert major family feuds that erupt
over even the slightest ambiguity
about the wishes of a deceased relative.
Whether it's choosing how to distribute
assets among heirs, designating an
executor of the will or bequeathing
wealth to charity, the decision must
be weighed carefully and properly
documented, they say, or it can cause
long-lasting rifts.
Without
a will or other beneficiary arrangement,
assets end up in probate court and
are distributed to surviving relatives
through a state formula and legal
proceedings that identify heirs and
value property. Though the process
can pass assets to heirs, estate planners
often recommend that clients with
larger estates, like those of many
doctors, use a will or a trust to
distribute their wealth in a more
precise, faster and perhaps tax-advantaged
way that also may protect their assets
from creditors.
"Generally,
physicians' estates are larger, and
that brings added planning needs.
And they are more exposed than most
people to lawsuits, so then the size
of their estate and extra exposure
makes them more in need of asset protection
than most people," said Mike
Janko, executive director of the National
Assn. of Financial & Estate Planning.
Jerome
Melchior, MD, a 60-year-old urologist
in Vincennes, Ind., already has gone
through the estate planning process
twice and expects to update his plan
again sometime soon.
"My
father died when I was a senior in
high school. I wanted to make sure
that if such a catastrophe happened
in our life, my family would be well-protected,"
Dr. Melchior said.
Dr.
Melchior's first plan was drawn up
while his children were still in preschool.
He appointed a guardian for them in
the event that he and his wife died.
About 10 years later, he changed the
plan because he had more property
and tax laws had changed.
His
current plan includes using several
different trusts. He expects to tweak
it soon, now that his children are
adults.
"To
do estate planning and to do a will
means you have to recognize that you
are going to die. And a lot of people
don't like to see that as a possibility.
Certainly we as physicians see it
more than most. But we as physicians
put off things like that more often
than we should," Dr. Melchior
said.
To
get started, Janko recommends getting
professional advice from a financial
planner or accountant. Without it,
a person would have to do considerable
research and paperwork to properly
create a plan. He said an attorney
also should be involved at some point
to review legal documents.
Once
a dialogue is opened with a professional
and basic facts about the family and
assets are determined, Janko said
the first decision would be whether
to rely on a will or to create a trust.
A
will can designate how assets should
be distributed after the debts of
the deceased person's estate are paid.
It also can designate guardianship
for any minor children left behind.
Most
wills appoint an executor who is in
charge of settling the estate, paying
debts and distributing assets. Kotzer
warned that being an executor requires
a great deal of responsibility, and
permission should be asked before
naming someone an executor. He said
the role can be shared, so parents
may want to consider appointing all
of their children as executors to
avoid causing hard feelings.
For
people with smaller estates, a will
may be an adequate vessel for distributing
assets, and probate court may be avoided.
But probate still may be required
even with a will if the estate includes
property that is titled in the deceased
person's name.
"That's
lengthy and expensive; it's an open
invitation to lawsuits and claims
of all types, and it's public information,
so most people like to avoid probate.
And a trust will help do that really
nicely," Janko said.
A
matter of trust
Leigh-Alexandra Basha, a tax and estate
planning attorney in Vienna, Va.,
said wills are good companion documents
to trusts, providing a safety net
to properly direct the distribution
of any assets that were excluded from
the trust.
Two
main kinds of trusts -- revocable
and irrevocable -- are commonly used
in estate planning. Both are legal
arrangements created to hold assets
for designated beneficiaries, which
could be people or charities. The
trusts can contain anything from stock
portfolios to real estate. Different
types of trusts have different tax
implications.
A
revocable trust allows the person
who created it to maintain control
of its assets during his or her life,
meaning assets can be moved and the
trust can be changed, amended or revoked.
These trusts are considered ideal
for people who want the privacy benefits
of a trust while keeping control of
the property. But revocable trusts
do not provide asset protection from
creditors.
For
that, an irrevocable trust can be
used. These trusts generally cannot
be amended or revoked, and assets
within them are off-limits to creditors.
For physicians who may be concerned
about malpractice lawsuits, the asset
protection may make irrevocable trusts
an attractive tool.
Janko
said trusts in general provide flexibility
about how wealth is distributed after
death. For example, a trust can hold
onto assets for periods of a time,
allowing young heirs to mature before
inheriting any money.
Robert
Brown, an estate planner and attorney
in St. Louis, recommends trusts for
higher-income clients. He said trusts
can be more expensive than other estate
planning tools -- a basic one costs
about $1,300 compared with roughly
$400 for an average will -- but they
also have advantages. The key to making
them work, he said, is ensuring that
the assets they hold are titled properly.
"We're
forever amazed how many people put
a lot of time into the whole estate
planning process, then no one follows
through to title the assets and make
sure what they want to happen, happens,"
Brown said.
Most
assets up to a certain limit are exempt
from being taxed after a person dies,
meaning the heirs shouldn't have to
pay taxes on property left behind.
The limit is $1 million this year,
but anything on top of that can be
taxed at a rate of 49%. The limits
and rates are scheduled to change
through 2010.
John
Frantz, MD, an internist in Monroe,
Wis., has his estate set up so his
heirs won't have to worry about what
is left over when he dies. His goal
is to get the value of his estate
as close to zero as possible while
he is alive, depleting but not outliving
his nest egg.
"My
guiding principle in estate planning
is to arrange for my estate to self-destruct,
so it's all over when you're done.
Meanwhile, you've got more to play
with," Dr. Frantz said. "You
tell your heirs that you've got your
estate rigged up to be more generous."
Dr.
Frantz advocates using annuities and
charitable remainder trusts to maintain
income while giving away wealth. He
also grants interest-free loans to
charities, which gives him the option
of calling in the money if he needs
it while he is still alive. "It
destroys the income," so it has
tax benefits, he said. "And you're
providing it to a charity that you
want to support."
Dr.
Frantz and his wife -- also an 80-year-old
practicing internist -- have picked
each other to take charge of the estate
if the other becomes incapacitated.
The role is called a durable power
of attorney. Dr. Frantz said their
children were fine with the decision.
"They don't live nearby and were
just as glad we didn't pick them."
Experts
say designating someone to have durable
power of attorney is a critical choice
because in the event of incapacity,
the appointee will have access to
and control over everything from tax
returns to payment of medical reimbursements.
A
similar role is assigned by designating
a medical power of attorney, which
varies in different states. The appointee
carries out a person's medical decisions
in case of incapacity.
"Oftentimes
the individual you would choose for
a medical power [of attorney] would
be very different [than a durable
power] because you would want different
qualities and characteristics,"
said Basha, the tax and estate planning
attorney. "I've had clients whose
kids say, 'I don't feel comfortable
knowing I pulled the plug on Mom or
Dad. Don't ask me. I can't do it.'
"
She
said it was important to have an attorney
draft the documents that grant powers
of attorney so they can survive any
legal challenges. She also said it
was important to update the documents
at least every three to five years
to ensure their legitimacy.
Updating
the plan
Updating the estate plan every few
years can help ensure that names on
titles are correct and all property
is catalogued. Basha said updates
are especially critical following
a divorce because the former spouse's
name might remain on some assets.
Those items that were owned in joint
tenancy by a couple go to the surviving
spouse after the other's death unless
they have been retitled.
"Maybe
everything was OK when Dad was around,
but you take him away and suddenly
Dad's children don't get along with
Dad's wife," she said. "If
everything has been done and is in
place, that's the best legacy the
parent can leave the children. It's
to have cared enough to put their
own fear of mortality aside, to sit
down and say my children won't have
to pick up the pieces of this mess."
Basha
said estate plans succumb to legal
challenges when people try to do them
"on the cheap." She knew
a man who went to Bolivia to do his
estate planning because he thought
it would provide savings. Instead,
after his death, his estate racked
up a fortune in costs going through
probate in the United States.
But
challenges can arise to any estate,
especially if heirs feel confused
about the wishes of the deceased person,
said Kotzer, who co-authored the book,
"The Family Fight: Planning to
Avoid It." He recommends cataloguing
personal belongings, possibly even
videotaping them, so they can be easily
itemized and directed properly after
death. Also, he said it can be helpful
to leave directions for heirs about
where to find important documents
and other belongings such as keys.
Deb
Harper, MD, a pediatrician in Spokane,
Wash., said she and her husband periodically
talk to their children about the choices
they have made regarding estate planning.
"It's
certainly important within my family
not to have living members fall out
as a result of squabbling over something
that's left in the estate," Dr.
Harper said. "That's one of the
reasons we go over this pretty regularly.
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