Posts Tagged ‘seminars’

Did your lawyer (inadvertently) rip you off

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Joe (a 63-year old reader of this column who hails from Iowa, but winters in Florida) almost cried when talking to me on the phone. He said, “I still want to kick myself for thinking my estate plan was done. For years I was convinced that my plan was perfect.

“I never stopped reading and studying. You know, articles. Even books. All my professionals assured me my plan was the best it could be. I religiously attended seminars. I consulted regularly with my CPA and several lawyers. All confirmed that the estate plan drawn by my lawyer Mike was right for me and Mary (Joe’s wife).

“It never occurred to me that so many estate planning experts could be so dead wrong or that there’s a better way to transfer my business to the kids and deal with my other assets. Not until a friend brought me a small pile of your articles.

“I immediately read and reread the articles. The next day, I went to Mike’s office. Basically he gave three reasons why the dozens of concepts and ideas in your articles wouldn’t work for me: don’t apply to me, never heard of it or he’ll check it out and call me.”

The above summarizes about 20 minutes of Joe telling me about his years of planning with Mike (a friend and well-respected lawyer who specializes in estate planning).

Then, I asked Joe a series of blunt questions. His answers revealed Joe’s professionals had crafted a traditional estate plan.

My bet is that 90 percent of you married guys reading this article also have a traditional estate plan. What is it? Here’s the traditional plan Joe had (See if it sounds like your estate plan, as you read further).

Joe’s plan centers on two basic strategies: First, the plan takes advantage of the unified credit (actually $2 million is tax-free in 2006, 2007 and 2008; rising to $3.5 million in 2009. There is no tax in 2010. In 2011 the credit falls to $1 million). By using a two-trust arrangement (most often called Trust A and Trust B; marital trust and family trust or similar names), Joe and Mary each will escape tax on the amount of their unified credit, depending on their year of death. Second, the couple’s plan takes advantage of the marital deduction, which means zero estate tax when the first of Joe or Mary passes.

That’s it: the traditional estate plan that we see in all 50 states. That was Joe and Mary’s plan. Is your plan the same? Similar?

What’s the guaranteed result? The plan prevents the IRS from collecting a dime at the first death (of either Joe or Mary). Good! However, when the second spouse dies, the IRS gets its pound of flesh. In this couple’s case it’s a ton. If their wealth stayed the same, from today until the day both deceased, their estate tax would have been $4,655,000.

You’ll love the rest of the story.

Joe said, “Irv will you give me a second opinion?” I agreed. Joe sent me a standard package of information (tax returns and financial statements — both business and personal; family tree; and his estate plan documents). After two more telephone conversations, we pinned down Joe’s goals: for him and Mary, his successful business (wanted to leave it to his middle son) and his family (four kids and six grandchildren).

Three weeks later I called Joe and outlined the wealth transfer plan I had created (with the help of my network lawyer, Don). Joe’s family will receive every dime of his and Mary’s wealth, probably more (we actually created additional tax-free wealth because we took advantage of the tax-free environments, particularly strategies involving life insurance and charity — available in the tax law). Gone was the $4,655,000 estate tax obligation to the IRS.

A delighted Joe couldn’t help feeling ripped off by his lawyer’s traditional estate plan. Don and I explained that Mike’s plan was the norm.

After our comprehensive plan was reduced to writing (five new documents and some modifications to the trusts that Mike wrote), we submitted the new plan and documents to Mike. He was easy to work with. Don and I answered his stream of questions. Mike — after about three weeks of “review and research” (his words) — fully endorsed our plan.

For me this is a rewarding story, because it shows that the message we try to deliver — you can always win the estate tax game — is getting through to the readers of this column

If you are married and have a traditional estate plan (the same or similar to Joe’s), most likely your plan is not complete.

Think second opinion.

Don’t Let ‘Estate-Tax-Itis’ Drain The Family Wealth

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

Adreaded disease is spreading like wildfire — in all 50 of the United States.

It debilitates most successful business owners, then, ravages some or all of the kids and eventually hurts the grandkids.

Known by various names, the most common name is “estate-tax-itus.” It drains family wealth.

Some people don’t even know they have the disease. Most know because they have the painful symptoms (a huge tax bill) and search in vain for a cure. They attend seminars, read articles, special reports and books. They go from advisor to advisor looking for relief.

The key question is: “Is there a cure?”

The answer is a resounding :Yes!”

This article shows you how to start the process to totally cure estate-tax-itus for yourself, your family and your business — every time, no matter how young or old you are, whether you are worth $1 million, $10 million (or much more).

There are many ways to fight the disease, but the best way is to build a “tax-immune system.” For best results, start today.

Here’s a three-step process that works every time. Steps No. 1 and No. 2 make the diagnosis. Step No. 3 accomplishes the cure.

Step No. 1: Prepare a personal financial statement for you and your spouse. Divide your assets into the following five categories.

— Residence

— Business

— Qualified plans (pension, profit-sharing, 401(k), rollover IRA or other qualified plans)

— All other assets (typically, investments)

— Life insurance

Step No. 2: Make a list of your goals (actually three lists) — (1) for you and (if married) your spouse; (2) for your family (typically children and grandchildren); and (3) your business.

Here are the typical core goals we see in practice:

For list (1) — Maintain your lifestyle for as long as you (husband and wife) live and allow you to control your assets for as long as you live;

For list (2) — transfer your assets to the children and grandchildren intact — free of the estate tax-and educate your grandchildren;

For list (3) — transfer your business to the business child (or children) tax-free and treat the non-business children fairly.

Step. No. 3: Find an advisor who knows how to identify and implement the exact tax strategies that accomplish your goals using the specific assets on your financial statement.

Following are the are most often-used strategies we use in our practice to accomplish a typical client’s goals, based on the assets owned.

Your Residence. Use a Qualified personal residence trust to remove the residence from your estate, yet live in it and control it for as long as you live.

Your Business. Transfer your business to the business children using an Intentionally Defective Trust. It removes the business from your estate, transfers business to kids (tax-free to you and the kids), yet allows you to keep control for life (because you retain voting control).

Qualified plans. The funds in these plans are double-taxed, robbing your family of about 75 percent of the plan funds (i.e. the tax collectors get about $750,000 if you have $1 million in the plans, your family receives only $250.000).

Create a Subtrust or retirement plan rescue (RPR) to buy life insurance. This usually triples (or more) the amount you have in the plan, and your heirs get it all tax-free. For example, $1 million in the plan (worth only $250,000 to your family) will turn into $3 million (or more) for your family with a Subtrust or a RPR. And the entire $3 million is tax-free.

All other assets. Transfer these assets (all your assets, except those in the first three categories; for example, publicly traded stocks, bonds, real estate and other investments) to a family limited partnership, which legally reduces the value of these assets for tax purposes by 35 percent (yes, $1 million of real estate, stocks, bonds, etc. are only worth only $650,000 for tax purposes.)

Insurance. Get it out of your corporation and transfer all policies you or your spouse own to an irrevocable life insurance trust (But a Subtrust is best, if you can use it. See 3. above). Also, check out premium financing, a wonderful concept that allows you to buy huge amounts of life insurance ($3 million, $10 million or more) without paying premiums.

Finally, if your estate plan is already done, and it does not effectively eliminate the estate tax, get a second opinion.

Estate Tax Blog

by Irv Blackman

First and foremost, Irv Blackman is both a CPA and a lawyer. Irv is a tax guy. Stay tuned to the site by signing up for the RSS feed.