Taking the \”Estate\” Out of \”Estate Planning\”

People hearing the term, “estate planning” or even “legacy planning,” often wince, squirm, and cringe unless they are within a very fortunate income tax bracket. However, not one to be deterred, when I receive the rolling eyes or blank stare, I reach into my “unraveling legalese” briefcase and offer the following clarification: Your “estate” is anything you own. It doesn’t have to be a million-dollar home or a 1967 Aston Martin. It can include the 150 classic jazz LPs that belonged to your father, your grandmother’s wedding ring, or you and your spouse’s stubs to the Blackhawks 2010 championship. The goodwill created in your small business is also part of your estate, your legacy. Additionally, included are contracts in which you’ve assigned rights to be effectuated at a certain time, i.e., life insurance. Note, however, that though life insurance is a component of your entire estate, it is not part of your probate estate. Estate planning is the process by which everything you own and will likely own or inherit, as well as your liabilities and obligations, is considered to determine how best to transfer your possessions to your heirs and/or intended beneficiaries. If you own a home, a retirement account, life insurance, have one or more dependents and a dog, deciding on who gets what and why is the process of estate planning. Estate planning is not limited to considering how beneficiaries can inherit tax-free or how one can use the current state and federal tax laws to the advantage of your living trust beneficiaries. Estate planning also includes anticipating scenarios such as ensuring that the needs of dependents or a partner with special challenges is provided for and providing for special beneficiaries who may not yet be born. Hence, estate planning is just planning for your future. It is not a tool merely for the wealthy; estate planning is a tool for the wise.
Lucky Stars Unlucky Heirs: Even the Unfamous Should Have a Valid Will

Approximately 70% of Americans who should leave some sort of testamentary document or trust behind when they die don’t. Why? Because we don’t like thinking about the day when we’re no longer going to be around, let alone talking about it, and heaven forbid planning for it. So we procrastinate until we end up dead with loved ones on the cusp of committing murder or worse – battling each other in probate court until attorneys’ fees have engulfed most of the estate. I offer a few suggestions: Don’t be like Sonny Bono who died without a will and left his widow to battle with a man claiming to be Chaz’s illegitimate half-brother. If you’re married or in a civil union, try not to repeat Barry White’s mistake. “The Maestro” died not only intestate, i.e., without a will, but also without having divorced his first wife with whom he’d been estranged for decades. So if you’re going to put off the inevitable, don’t put off making your divorce or break-up legally valid. The Barry White Wars: (1) between long-time lover and mother of last child and estranged wife of about 20 years and mother of four, and (2) between his 9 children. Not that I think that many would share in the aspirations of Anna Nicole Smith, those who are reading this should consider when drafting your current estate plan that you may have another child after the plan is effectuated. So try not to accidentally disinherit the second child by leaving everything to your “only child, INSERT NAME HERE.” Finally, if you can satisfy suggestions 1 – 3 successfully, remember not to “be like Mike,” Michael Jackson, that is. If you have a trust, actually put something in it. Most know how literally indebted to the world Michael Jackson was, but if he had placed a few actual, fully-paid-for possessions in trust, the creditors would have probably been unlikely to gain access to those assets. A trust with nothing in it is invalid. Although I don’t suggest creating a bequest like the late Torontonian, Charles Millar, leaving everything to the Toronto woman who gave birth the most times in the 10 years following his death, I do suggest having something valid in place to protect your family, if not from others, then from themselves.