Tuesday, July 20, 2021

 

What Is a Directed Trust and What Are Its Benefits?

Directed trusts can be a useful estate planning tool, allowing you to place your family’s assets in a trust but benefit from the expertise of an advisor who knows more about the handling of certain trust functions than you may. 

The benefit of a directed trust is it allows you to retain control while appointing someone to handle any special assets or conditions that the trust might oversee.  In the case of a regular trust, the trustee is in charge of all aspects of the trust. With a directed trust, you can appoint someone other than the trustee to be in charge of elements like distributions or investments. This splits up the responsibilities: the trustee can focus on handling the administrative aspects of the trust while the appointed advisor directs the trustee on one part of the trust.

For example, an investment advisor could focus on the trust’s investments. If you have complicated investments, it might be a good role for a trusted financial advisor. In the case of a family business, you may want family members to have a say or want an objective non-family member to assess the family’s needs. A distribution advisor would be responsible for making distributions to the beneficiaries. This might be especially useful if you want a family member to be able to make decisions about a child with special needs. Or you might even want a committee of family members to decide how to make distributions in order to make distributions based on the needs of the beneficiaries. 

Both the trustee and the advisor are considered fiduciaries, which means they must act in the beneficiary’s best interest. While the trust document sets out the responsibilities of each party, if you are creating a directed trust, it is also a good idea to write a statement of intent that explains what you want the roles of the trustee and the advisor to be. 

Directed trusts are very complicated and require careful planning. If you are thinking about a directed trust, consult your attorney. 

Contact us

Elise Lampert, Esq.

Law Office of Elise Lampert

9595 Wilshire Blvd. | Suite 900 | Beverly Hills , CA 90212

Phone: (818) 905-0601 / Email: elise@elampertlaw.com

https://www.eliselampert.com


Friday, July 9, 2021

 

Why Everyone Should Have an Estate Plan

Do you have a will? A durable power of attorney? A health care proxy? If so, no reason to read on. If not, why not? Failure to create an estate plan risks causing discord in your family for generations to come.

The following are four often stated reasons for not having an estate plan:

  • Just not getting around to it 

  • Feeling that one's estate is too small to justify a will or revocable trust

  • Believing that joint ownership of accounts with children is an adequate plan

  • Not wanting to pay a lawyer to draw up the plan.

Just Not Getting Around to It

A discussion of why everyone needs an estate plan starts with a consideration of what "estate" means and what "estate plan" means. Your "estate" is simply everything you own: bank accounts, stock, real estate, motor vehicles, jewelry, household furniture, retirement plans, life insurance, etc.

Your estate plan is the means by which you pass your estate to the next generation. This can be accomplished through a variety of instruments. Most retirement plans and life insurance policies pass to whomever you name as beneficiaries. Property that is jointly owned passes to the surviving joint owner. Trust assets go as provided by the terms of the trust.

Only property you hold in your name comes under the instructions laid out in your will. If you don't have a will, such property passes under the rules of "intestacy" set out in state law. In general, those rules provide that your property will be divided among your closest family members.

Problems often arise when people don't coordinate all of these methods of passing on their estate. The will may say to divide everything equally among your children, but if you put an account in joint names with one child "for the sake of convenience" there could be a fight about whether that account should be put back in the pool with the rest of your property.

One of the most important aspects of a will is that it names an executor or personal representative to handle the probate of your estate. Litigation can develop simply because family members cannot agree on who should take on this role.

For those with small children, the will is indispensable because it permits you to appoint a guardian in case both parents pass away. It also permits you to choose a trustee to manage your estate for the benefit of your children. This person may or may not be the same as the guardian.

Estate Too Small?

For many individuals, especially those with smaller estates, the most important document is not the will, but a durable power of attorney. Through a durable power of attorney, you can appoint someone to handle your finances in the event that you are ever unable to do so yourself. It also permits you to choose your guardian in case one is ever needed, although one of the main purposes of a durable power of attorney is to avoid such a necessity.

Similar to a durable power of attorney, a health care proxy appoints someone you trust to make medical decisions for you in the event of your incapacity.

While a will protects your estate after you're gone, a durable power of attorney and health care proxy protect you while you're still here. 

But I Took Care of It With Joint Accounts

Joint accounts are a poor estate planning tool. It is impossible to keep separate accounts for more than one child equal. This is especially true if you become incapacitated and no longer have control over the accounts. Trying to save a few dollars by managing your estate in this fashion runs the strong risk of causing discord in your family for generations to come. Why take the chance?

But I Don't Want to Pay a Lawyer a Lot of Money for Some Simple Documents

You can buy software that produces most of the estate planning documents an attorney will prepare for you. And in nine cases out of ten, those documents will do just fine. But how do you know you're not the tenth case? Do you have a taxable estate? Do you own significant amounts of tax-deferred retirement plans? Do you know how to fund the revocable trust provided on the computer program? Is there anything about your estate that is unusual, such as having a child with disabilities?

In short, if there's anything about your situation that's not plain vanilla, you need to see a lawyer. If you have any questions about your estate plan, you need to see a lawyer. As with joint accounts, the problems you may create by not getting competent legal advice probably won't be yours, but may well be your children's. Do you want to risk leaving that legacy?

Contact us

Elise Lampert, Esq.

Law Office of Elise Lampert 

9595 Wilshire Blvd. | Suite 900 | Beverly Hills , CA 90212

Phone: (818) 905-0601 / Email: elise@elampertlaw.com

https://www.eliselampert.com