L.A.
Daily News
Living
Trusts Can Have Advantages
By Barbara Correa
Staff Writer
The
love of money proves to be a root of all kinds of
evil when it causes a family to fight over an inheritance.
Even
with the recent stock market bust, over $20 trillion
will pass from estates to heirs in the next 50 years
-- the largest transfer of wealth in U.S. history,
according to a study by the Social Welfare Research
Institute at Boston College.
It
seems a safe bet that not all of that money will
pass on to succeeding generations smoothly, often
because of common mistakes that can easily be avoided.
The
first mistake many people make is to assume that
since they don't have much in the way of assets,
any wealth transfer will be very simple after they
die.
Les
Kotzer, a Canadian attorney and author of "The
Family Fight: Planning to Avoid It," said he
had one client who's mother had always claimed to
be broke, so she didn't do any planning for her
inheritance.
After
her mother's death, however, several letters from
ex-presidents -- including Harry Truman and Franklin
D. Roosevelt -- to her father were discovered in
the house. They turned out to be worth a substantial
sum, which the children immediately began fighting
over.
The
first action toward estate planning should be taking
stock of assets, regardless of how meager they seem
to be. Second is that the person to pass on an inheritance
must communicate with the heirs what they intend
to do in as much detail as they can.
"What
I find is there's a gap between Depression-era parents
and their baby-boomer children," Kotzer said.
"People are calling who have never spoken about
these issues with their parents -- whether they
have a will or power of attorney."
It's
crucial to have in place some kind of a plan about
who is going to get what.
"Parents
will assume goodwill between their children. They
think, my kids will work it out. And I tell people
no, usually it's not the kids who work it out, it's
the lawyers."
While
that can happen whether there's a plan in writing
or not, a written will or more elaborate mechanism
can take out a lot of that guesswork.
Ambiguity
over inheritance has grown as people live longer,
often requiring a full-time caregiver. Frequently,
that caregiver is one of several children who are
heirs.
"The
mother has given the caregiver the same as the other
kids, and there's a disgruntled child who gave up
a lot of their life. There's an assumption that
the other kids will say, take this extra money.
But it very rarely happens."
Another
problem is that when one child is made an executor
of a will, the other kids feel slighted.
To
avoid that, Kotzer favors all of the participants
sharing equally in the execution, or at least having
a conversation with the others to make sure there
isn't any ill will about having one executor.
If
the size of an estate -- including all personal
and real property and economic assets -- is tiny,
that might be the extent of the planning.
However,
in real estate-rich California, anyone who owns
a home might fall into a category of wanting to
protect their assets or have control over how they
are managed.
"If
you own a condo in Westminster or Sylmar you're
over $100,000," said John Trommald, an estate
and probate lawyer with offices in Encino, Seal
Beach and West Los Angeles.
That
$100,000 marker is the threshold for opening a living
trust because that's California's cutoff for when
an estate may be subject to a probate court process,
whereas smaller estates are generally exempt.
Living
trusts have skyrocketed in the past five years,
particularly in California, where real estate has
appreciated so rapidly. One of their main selling
points is that they help avert probate, perceived
as an expensive and lengthy legal process to be
avoided at all costs.
The
primary tax advantage would be for a husband and
wife, who can protect up to $2 million from estate
taxes in California if it's in a living trust, Trommald
said. If the assets are outside a trust, only $1
million is protected. For a single person, it's
$1 million regardless, so there's no tax advantage.
But
living trusts -- basically legal shells protecting
assets from taxes and unwanted claims on those assets
-- have stirred some controversy as their popularity
has inevitably attracted scam artists looking to
prey on the unassuming.
Earlier
this year, Attorney General Bill Lockyer issued
a warning targeted to seniors to be on the lookout
for "living trust mill" sale agents posing
as trust experts or professional estate planners.
In
addition to fees paid to set up a trust, an investor
who signs over their assets to some other trustee
is risking everything, the warning said. Opening
a trust should always involve a qualified attorney.
Financial planners can't write one on their own.
There
are all kinds of trust options available and each
is tailored by the lawyer to the specific circumstances
and goals of the client. The average cost to set
one up runs between $800-$1,500, depending on complexity,
said Robert Goldsmith, a financial planner in Simi
Valley who acts as an attorney liaison for clients
interested in a trust.
One
reason to open one is that, unlike a will, a living
trust manages assets during your lifetime in the
event you become incapacitated.
For
example, a living trust that includes power of attorney
prevents a situation where the trustee falls into
a coma and the family fights over whether to pull
the plug or not.
A
will doesn't kick in until after death, and even
then, all it does is tell the court what you wish
will happen with your estate.
"A
lot can happen until it gets to the heirs,"
Goldsmith said.
A
living trust can certainly be contested, but it's
much harder to do than with a will. And since most
trusts include a no contest provision, none of the
beneficiaries can fight over it.
Carolyn
Strickler, 72, a writer and Los Angeles historian
in Pasadena, already has a will and power of attorney
with a private conservator. But she's considering
setting up a living trust anyway, mainly to control
the distribution of her 1,500-volume book collection
and her husband's paintings to 10 nieces and nephews
as well as other relatives.
"The
living trust would make it easier if I were living
but couldn't manage this stuff myself. If you're
incapacitated they will deal with it."
Another
benefit to a trust for her is that it maintains
the privacy of the estate, whereas a probate process
puts it into the public record.
Gift
that keeps on giving
In
terms of shielding from taxes a specific gift to
an heir, a trust doesn't necessarily have an advantage
over a will.
Say
a parent paid $30,000 for a suburban house years
ago, and now it's worth $300,000 to $400,000. The
parent puts the child's name on the title and walks
away.
The
property will be subject to capital gains taxes
because to qualify as an inheritance it has to be
recovered at the time of death, through a transferring
vehicle, such as a will or trust.
"Even
with the tax cut we got, you add state taxes and
you'll still be paying 23 percent in taxes,"
Trommald said.
There
are some instances when a trust may not be the best
option. One disadvantage for homeowners is that
mortgage companies generally won't loan to a trust.
So refinancing, buying or selling requires taking
the property out of the trust until that's done.
The only real downside there is that it's a paperwork
hassle.
But
any trust demands a certain amount of record keeping
and management, said Goldsmith. Since it's "living"
it can't just be written up and put away in a drawer.
Sometimes
people want their estates to go through the probate
process because they don't trust their natural heirs
with the inheritance.
"Once
every three years or so I'll come across someone
whose family are fighters," Trommald said.
"I
tell them to go to probate. With probate, the judge
has to oversee the collection of bills and money.
If you think your natural heirs are not trustworthy,
you want probate involved."
"The
Family Fight" isn't available in bookstores,
but you can order it at www.familyfight.com, at
www.amazon.com, or by calling 1-877-439-3999.