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April 1, 2013 By clairedejong

How Much Do You Know

When I sit down with clients, there’s a varying level of knowledge about estate planning, the different documents, and just what everything means. As such, my job is often to make sure people know how the law works and what happens in different situations so my clients can make the best decisions themselves with advice from me where they want it. So, for this month, I thought I’d start with the basics:

  • pic_06What is probate?
  • What is a will?
  • What is a trust?
  • What is a power of attorney?
  • What is an advance health care directive?

Probate is the court process a person’s property goes through when they die to transfer the property out of the deceased’s name. Wills must go through probate (though it took Esq. behind my name for my mother to believe me on that). You can avoid through non-probate transfers, such as transfer-on-death (“TOD”s), payable-on-death (“POD”s), trusts, joint titling, and other methods. Probate is time consuming and can be very expensive. Because of this many people specifically form an estate plan to avoid probate. If you’re worried about your beneficiaries being unable to access quickly or wasting resources on court, talk to an attorney. There are many methods to avoid probate and not all are appropriate for everyone.

Trusts, however, are the main way to avoid probate. A properly funded trust effectively re-titles property from a person’s name to the trust. The person then decides who benefits from the trust assets and who controls those assets until they pass or are no longer competent to make decisions. Generally, the person setting up the trust may benefit and control the assets. This allows a person who becomes incapacitated to continue to benefit from their property, but gives a different, competent person the ability to make decisions regarding that property.

It’s very important to note the “properly funded” part. If property is not actually transferred to a trust (normally by renaming the asset in the name of the trust), then the property cannot be transferred through the trust documents and must still go through probate and a will or state inheritance law.

So, every estate plan (whether a trust is involved or not) should include a will. Wills set out a person’s wishes upon their death for guardianship of minor children and any property not transferred through non-probate transfers. This means that anything with a beneficiary (i.e. life insurance, retirement plans), TOD, POD, jointly titled, etc. are not given away according to the will.

Along the same lines, every estate plan needs a Power of Attorney. Powers of Attorneys come in many different types, but generally should cover legal, financial, and medical decisions. The document gives another person the power to make decisions for the person. The types of decisions can be limited and the document can be drafted so it only goes into effect when a person becomes incompetent.

Finally, a Health Care Directive establishes a person’s desires regarding specific medical situations. It covers circumstances where a person is unable to make decisions regarding their wishes, but can be used outside of terminal conditions (unlike a Living Will).

A full estate plan covers all of these areas and uses each document to make sure you are completely protected. Hopefully, this has explained the basics for you, but please if you have any questions email me or contact me here.

Filed Under: Blog, Joint Titling, Power of Attorney, Probate, Trusts, Wills Tagged With: Beneficiaries, Estate Plan, Health Care Directive, Inheritance, Joint Titling, Living Will, Power of Attorney, Probate, Trust, Will

March 1, 2013 By Martha Burkhardt

Well, It’s Too Late Now…

As I was speaking to a good friend who lives out of state this week we were discussing estate planning; the purpose of various documents, costs, etc. However, because I’m not licensed in the state she lives in, the best advice I could give her was to talk to a local attorney who focuses on estate planning. Unfortunately, time was a factor here, and due to other factors, my friend felt an online service with estate planning forms was the best option. Now, in her situation, it really wasn’t that unfortunate, nothing’s come about (and hopefully won’t) that has caused her to need the documents. But it leads to an issue I’ve heard often.

I’ve been asked many times about inexpensive options regarding estate planning. Specifically, people love the idea of an online site that provides a do-it-yourself form with filling in the blanks. It’s normally, quick, easy, and extremely inexpensive when you’re comparing these forms to a real life attorney. However, as expected, the idea of these sites really does make me cringe.

There are many reasons I’m not a fan of online legal sites, but my top concern is that specifically with estate planning documents, the documents don’t go into effect until it’s too late to change them. For example, if you use a power of attorney from a website, and later go to use it because the person it was created for is unable to make decisions, and then find out its unenforceable, you’re stuck without a power of attorney because the creator is unable to make decisions! So if you use an online site without the benefit of an attorney to catch mistakes, you might not know until it’s very costly and time consuming to fix.

In addition, if there is a mistake a website doesn’t take the liability of that mistake, while many attorneys carry malpractice insurance and provide an additional level of assurance if that mistake does happen (though the chances are much less to begin with).

Another major concern I have with executing estate planning documents without an attorney regards the very specific requirements and formalities execution normally entails. There are requirements as to how many witnesses, who may not sign as a witness, notary publics, who must be present when signing, the language used regarding notaries and witnesses, and many, many more depending on the document. While the online sites give instructions on how to execute a document, they cannot physically be present when executing them the same way an attorney can.

gradpicAlong with this, estate planning documents are notorious for legalese: the legal language rarely decipherable, let alone understandable, outside of the legal profession. How is anyone supposed to fill out a document themselves, when it’s written in a different language? Finally, attorneys have the benefit of working with numerous clients and identifying issues many others would never recognize. As I was reminded multiple times throughout the three years of law school, law school teaches a person “to think like a lawyer.” I don’t know how to think like a car mechanic, but I do know how to think like an attorney and many times I’m able to bring up issues my clients are grateful to talk about, but have not though about before.

Often I hear the joke that a person doesn’t have an estate to plan (I’ll explain why this is incorrect at a different time). But if you’re concerned about assets and well-being enough to worry about any estate planning documents at all, you have plenty of assets to at least talk to an attorney! Many attorneys, including myself, offer free consultations and I would be more than happy to talk to anyone regarding an online will, power of attorney, or other estate planning document to make sure it’s sufficient. If you know of any family or friends who have taken the online form approach, please pass along this information!

Filed Under: Blog, Estate Plan, Trusts, Wills Tagged With: attorney, attorneys, Estate Plan, Online, Power of Attorney

February 1, 2013 By Martha Burkhardt

Even The Simpsons Worry About Guardianship… Do You?

This week when I turned on the television to watch two of my favorite shows, I got caught thinking about work. Maybe it was a theme within FOX, but both The Simpsons and Bones revolved around issues of estate planning.

The episode of The Simpsons didn’t involve any big discussions or much deep thought (though I know that comes as a surprise). The whole episode shows Marge and Homer Simpson trying to find guardians for their children. While their problem is finding anyone who wants their kids (see the clip below) most people face the harder decision of finding someone they trust to care for their kids.

Bones took the issue more seriously (again, big surprise), it also presented the subject with much needed humor. As I discuss this subject on a daily-basis, I very much appreciated a popular media tackling the matter and presenting it in (as much as possible) a positive light.

As I watched, the lawyer in me laughed at the two extremes Booth and Bones presented. A good will does not need to be 312 pages, but in turn should also not be hand-written on a sticky note. Further, when you have a complicated family or sizeable assets or just want to avoid the courts, a will probably will not accomplish your goals. Revocable trusts are a great option for most families (even if you’re not a genius scientist with best selling books).

However, I winced at the proposition Booth presented of leaving his girlfriend assets and trusting her to be fair to his son. This is something I advise people on a regular basis. Never create any legal document expecting everyone’s best behavior. If you could do that, then why create the legal document to begin? If you want to leave something to your children, leave it to the children, not another person. If you leave it to the guardian/parent/partner, that person has no legal obligation to use it for the children.

In reality I probably winced at the majority of Booth’s sentiments. Especially, that preparing for death is inviting it. Unfortunately, death is a fact of life and can be extremely difficult on those who are left behind. When someone isn’t prepared in advanced, they also leave behind a tangle of assets that the court has to sort out. This leaves their loved ones not only in with emotional grief, but very likely legal grief as well.

Even if I disagreed with some of the characters throughout Bones and wouldn’t recommend Homer & Marge’s style of picking guardians (finding random strangers), I appreciated FOX and both shows tackling a hard subject. In doing so it raised some important questions and hopefully will get some families talking. It’s at least gotten me to do so.

Filed Under: Beneficiaries, Blog, Children, Estate Plan, Trusts, Wills Tagged With: assets, Beneficiaries, Children, Death, Estate Plan, Executor, Guardianship, Inheritance, Revocable, Revocable Trust, Trust, Will

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