Posts from October 2009.

What No More Estate Taxes?

We spend time and effort creating plans to find legal ways to avoid paying taxes.

We all pay taxes everyday… from property tax, to sales tax, to gasoline tax, to Mello Roos  (a nice little tax on newer homes here in Carmel Valley to fund new schools)… Taxes are everywhere.

So, when a tax is set to disappear… people take notice.

The Federal Estate Tax is scheduled to disappear next year.  However, according to the Wall Street Journal, “Washington insiders are betting lawmakers won’t let that happen.”  Currently, an individual can pass on $3.5 million at death without paying any tax (the amount has gradually been increasing since the law was passed in 2000).  After going to zero in 2010, the exemption is set to go back down to $1 million in 2011.  So, basically, right now there’s a moving target on the estate tax exemption.

The WSJ article makes the point that it doesn’t benefit anyone for the Estate Tax to disappear altogether because, as written, the Estate Tax disappears along with the provision allowing a step-up in cost basis for property passed on.  What this means in practical terms is that the value for tax purposes of property passed on at someone’s death is the value at the date of death — rather than at the date of purchase.  For example, let’s say your dad bought a house for $100,000 in 1970 and when he died in 2005, the house was worth $600,000 (notice I chose 2005 before the great decline?).   If the beneficiary later sold the house in 2006 for $610,000 he or she would only pay a capital gains tax on $10,000.  Much better than paying capital gains tax on $510,000 if the cost basis was the original date of purchase.  Agreed?  Of course.

The WSJ article also highlighted some other Estate Tax Avoidance Planning Tools that may disappear:

Other techniques long used to trim estate taxes may be scaled back or prohibited, however. They include family limited partnerships; grantor retained annuity trusts (GRATs); and qualified personal residence trusts (QPRTs). All use a variety of legal means to freeze or undervalue assets that are being transferred out of the owner’s estate.

Read the article yourself.  Here are some conclusions that I draw from the information:

1.  The Estate Tax is a moving target.  Don’t count on it disappearing in 2010 — but even if it does, the step-up in basis disappears so you have other problems…

2.  Estate Tax Laws Will Likely Always Change… Thus, if you planned your estate in 2000, after the above tax relief act was enacted, and “set it” to “forget it” on the shelf… your loved ones could be in trouble.  That’s why it is really important to work with a lawyer who as a matter of course is going to regularly review your plan — to make sure that it will always work.  Of course, there are many goals of creating wills, trusts, and estate plans… besides just legally avoiding taxes… but most people I know who have spent a lifetime working hard, making sacrifices in order to build up a nice nest egg want to see their children, and eventually their grandchildren, get as much of their hard-earned wealth tax free as possible!  Without proper planning, the potential taxes could be staggering.  We all pay taxes, but if you can avoid giving Uncle Sam half of your assets when you die… most people will take steps to do so.

3.  If you are a business owner, a physician, surgeon, or other individual with significant assets, now may be the time to set up some of the advanced planning options before they disappear.

Work hard, play hard, enjoy life, create a legacy — and take the time to find a trusted advisor on these legal issues.  A lawyer that stays up-to-date on these legal tax issues and who is dedicated to working with you over time to make sure regardless of what Congress does, you will be in a position to pass on your wealth to whom you want, when you want, with as little going to Uncle Sam as possible.

Leave Your Legacy,

Kristina Haymes

p.s.  If you live in the San Diego area, I am here to help.

p.p.s. Disclaimer: I’m not your lawyer (unless we have entered into a written agreement) and I’m not providing legal advice.  This blog is for general informational purposes only.

Are Your Kids Protected and Provide for Were Something to Happen to You?

Can you remember the day your first child was born?  Do you remember the joy as you brought that little person into your home.  Did you ever think that you could love so much?

Indeed, I think becoming a parent truly forces us to examine our lives and to reevaluate our values.

Most parents I know would do just about anything for their children.

And yet, (and I include myself in this statement), we too often forget to effectively plan for the (thankfully unlikely) event that we might not be here tomorrow.

I remember when our oldest child was 2 and my husband and I went on a trip to New York from California (a few short months after 9/11 no less!).  As a lawyer, I hastily put together a handwritten guardianship form indicating who we wanted to raise our son if something should happen to us.  Yet, in retrospect, this one page document left too many things unsaid and failed to take into account the short term and the long term.

What would happen in the short term?

What about financial resources? 

What about instructions about how we wanted our son raised?

There is so much more to effective planning than just a guardianship nomination.

In fact, there are six common mistakes that people tend to make!

I’m excited to announce that we will be offering a couple of free legal seminars:7 ”7 Steps to Ensure Your Kids Are Protected Were Something to Happen to You” here in San Diego on November 5, 2009 and on November 7, 2009.

You can register at www.cakidsguardplan.com.

Make sure your kids are protected and provided for were something to happen to you with our Kids protection planning seminars.  These seminars are absolutely free and you bring the kids to play at either JW Tumbles (a children’s gym) or Pump It Up “the inflatable party zone.”  Free food and fun and a free legal seminar to learn the 7 easy steps you need to take to protect your kids.

Hope to see you there.

Leave Your Legacy,
Kristina

p.s. be sure to register at www.caKidsGuardPlan.com because space is limited and we are almost full!

Welcome to the Creating Legacies Blog!

This blog is about living with the end in mind.  It is about legal planning (trusts, estates, wills, living trusts, powers of attorney, etc.) and protecting your assets and passing on your assets to future generations.  Yet, it is about so much more than material wealth!

It is about your spiritual wealth, your values, stories, experiences, life lessons all of the intangible wealth you possess!

It is about LEGACY… and Creating Legacies That Last!

So welcome!  I look forward to connecting with you and please feel free to comment on our posts!

Here is my first legacy thought…

Here is a fact of life that we often don’t think about… someday we will all die.  It is inevitable.  Our time on this earth is limited.

“Yes,” you may say, “I know.”

We know but we don’t think about it regularly.  We don’t think about it regularly not because we do not care about what will happen to our children, grandchildren, family, spouse, or loved ones after we die.  We don’t think about it because we are too busy with the business of life!  Life is busy (especially if you are like me and you are a parent of minor children and working).

So, we don’t think about the unexpected happening to us because we are busy and besides, isn’t that a bit morbid?

Or maybe you don’t think about it because you assume that nothing will ever happen to you.

Regardless of the reason, because we don’t think about the end of our life, we don’t do anything about it either.  We go on living as if we will live forever on this earth and we don’t plan and we don’t prepare for the day when our life will end.

Or, maybe you have planned for the future and for life contingencies.  If so, I congratulate you and you can now pat yourself on the back.  And if you have planned, then, the next step is to periodically review your plan and make sure that it is up-to-date and still works.  Because life changes.  Your assets change.  Your family changes, the law changes.  Things change and so we must make sure your plan is regularly reviewed.

For the rest of us who may have put off planning, it’s important that we take the time to think about the fact that one day we may not be here anymore, because that day could be tomorrow!  It could be tomorrow or it could be in 10, 20, 30, 40, or even 50 years.  By the Grace of God… No one knows the day or time except the man upstairs.  So we must prepare now and not take our tomorrows for granted.

Now for the story about my dad…


My dad passed away at the age of 66.  By today’s standards, that is not that old.  But, while he had paid thousands of dollars for an estate plan, when his life on this earth ended his plan didn’t work as I’m sure he hoped it would .  It had problems because while his estate was not that large, his lawyer had not transferred all of his assets to his trust.  In addition, his desires changed and instead of contacting his lawyer to update his trust and will, he amended it himself!  The problem is that the amendments made the documents unclear.  Needless to say, I was left with a mess.

My beloved father with me and my husband and our two youngest boys...

 

But there was so much more to my Dad and his Legacy than his estate.  The true value of my dad’s life was his spiritual, emotional, psychological, familial legacy.  My dad wanted to leave a legacy and he did!  But I wish that instead of just being imprinted upon my heart and my memory, that my Dad had left more concrete things about his Legacy.  Not for me but for my children!  My youngest child was 2 1/2 when my dad died.  So really, while he sees pictures of himself with Grandpa, he doesn’t really remember him.  How I would love for my three boys to be able to learn from the incredible wisdom and life lessons that Grandpa could share.

My dad was a spiritual leader in our family.  He was a man of great faith and great generosity.  How I long to have my boys learn from a male role model like that.

So, leaving a legacy is a blog about California trusts and estates, but in addition, it is a blog about so much more.  It is one thing to plan your estate (and you should, we will discuss this in the next post), but it is another thing to leave a legacy.

A legacy is all about the investments that you make during your life into people and projects.  A legacy is about far more than money.  It is about sharing your wisdom, your values, your life lessons, your love, and your vision with your loved ones.

We have a process at Haymes Law Group that is uniquely designed to assist you to create video, audio recordings, and written letters to loved ones to record your legacy.  We would love to assist you in this process.  Someday your loved ones will treasure this much more than any material asset you leave.  Trust me.  Money comes and goes, but legacies last forever.

Leave Your Legacy and live a life that matters,

Kristina