Admirable Administration
Question. If today were your last, how would you be remembered
regarding your estate planning? Would it be for leaving a mess for
others to clean up, or would it be for leaving a thoughtfully
drafted, thoroughly implemented and carefully maintained plan your
appointed fiduciaries could smoothly administer?
Finishing well regarding your estate
plan includes making things as easy as possible for your appointed
fiduciaries when the time comes for them to administer your estate.
The Three Phases
Upon your death, the post-mortem
(i.e., after death) responsibilities of your appointed fiduciaries
continue through three phases of estate administration. Whether your
estate plan is will-based or revocable living trust-based, your
fiduciaries must carry out certain responsibilities, including:
- Collect and manage your assets;
- Pay your debts, taxes and expenses; and
- Administer and distribute your assets for the benefit of your
named beneficiaries.
Your fiduciaries should seek appropriate
legal counsel throughout each of these three phases to ensure that
all of the "i’s" are dotted and the "t’s"
are crossed.
Collection & Management
Without delay, the first responsibility
of your fiduciaries is to protect and preserve your assets. This
includes taking an inventory of the assets, insuring and
safeguarding them, as well as determining their values as of the
date of death. Make sure your fiduciaries know where you keep your
asset inventory, as well as the account statements, certificates and
titles for each asset.
If you have a funded Revocable
Living Trust along with up-to-date records of the trust assets (and
their respective values), then you will greatly ease this initial
burden on your fiduciaries.
Even if you do not have a Revocable Living
Trust-based estate plan, maintaining current financial records can
save your fiduciaries considerable time (and therefore money) in
fulfilling their Collection and Management responsibilities.
Debts, Taxes & Expenses
Once your assets have been collected and
are under management, the fiduciaries must arrange for the payment
of your just debts, your tax liabilities and any expenses associated
with the post-mortem administration of your estate. Again, time is
of the essence.
Consider this: estate tax returns must be
filed within nine months of death, and many post-mortem planning
opportunities, such as disclaimers and certain elections
(e.g., Qualified Terminal Interest Property, alternate
valuation, etc.), must be timely made or they are lost … and with
them potentially hundreds of thousands of dollars in estate tax
savings.
The failure to comply with applicable legal
deadlines can expose your fiduciaries to some rather unpleasant
personal liabilities, to include tax liabilities of your estate, and
lawsuits from creditors and disgruntled heirs. Administering your
estate can quickly become a lose-lose proposition for your
fiduciaries.
Administration & Distribution
Whether your estate plan ultimately
provides for the distribution of your assets to your beneficiaries
in one lump sum, in multiple distributions or through ongoing trust
administration (to protect your assets for and from your
heirs), your fiduciaries must ensure that accurate records are
maintained and receipts obtained from each beneficiary. In fact, the
failure to account for all income, expenses and disbursements
throughout each of the three phases of estate administration can
result in civil and, potentially, criminal sanctions.
Final Thoughts
Post-mortem responsibilities can be very
complex. Before you select and appoint fiduciaries for your estate
plan, or agree to serve as a fiduciary for someone else, assess the
situation carefully with qualified legal counsel.
Treasure Hunt
Question: What property do you own, where is it located and how much
is it worth? Next question: Is this information recorded somewhere,
whether in hard-copy or electronically? Next question: Who, if
anyone, has knowledge of and access to this information? If you
cannot answer each of these questions with confidence, then your
final legacy for your loved ones may resemble a treasure hunt.
A Common Scenario
It happens too often. Responsible people
meet with legal counsel and prepare comprehensive estate plans.
Their plans may even include cutting edge techniques implemented
through proven legal instruments. Then, an injury or illness strikes
these responsible people and they become incapacitated. Eventually,
they die. Sometime thereafter, the successor decision-makers meet
with the legal counsel who prepared the estate plans and receive
their marching orders. These successors assume their positions of
responsibility only to make a shocking discovery: There is little,
if any, information available regarding the property they now are
legally required to identify, locate and value.
The Problem
Instead of approaching estate planning
as a process to get (and keep) their legal affairs in order, too
many people mistakenly believe that everything is okay once they
sign their legal instruments.
Nothing could be further from the truth. In
fact, signing legal instruments without identifying, locating and
valuing the property is like buying an automobile without putting
fuel in its tank. It may look nice, but you are not going anywhere.
The Solution
You are in the best position to know
what you have, where it is located and what it is worth. After all,
you likely are identified as the owner on any deed, title
certificate or account regarding each asset you own. Additionally,
you probably receive notice each year from tax collecting
authorities to remind you of your property ownership (and the taxes
you owe). If nothing else, make a copy of your deeds, titles,
account statements and tax notices, then retain them with your legal
instruments.
Do you have heirlooms and collectibles that
are difficult to value? If so, then a professional appraisal is
essential to establish their value for estate distribution and death
tax planning.
The Follow-Through
It has been said that the will to
succeed is for naught without the discipline to plan. When it comes
to avoiding an unpleasant treasure hunt for your loved ones,
maintaining accurate records is essential to the success or failure
of your estate plan. Do not forget to communicate this information
to your successor decision-makers. Even the best-laid plans succeed
or fail depending on how well they are recorded and communicated.
Remember: The time you invest today to
record and communicate information about your property will make
your estate administration more efficient (and less expensive)
later.
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