Shafae Law

Shafae Law

Shafae Law is a boutique law firm providing comprehensive estate planning, trust, estate, probate, and trust administration services located in the San Francisco Bay Area.

Filtering by Tag: revocable trust

Full Video of the January Living Trust Seminar

The seminar below was presented live on January 21, 2023, by Matt Shafae, at the reSolve Group offices in Palo Alto. We covered basic estate planning, how to review an existing estate plan, how to care for minor children, and a basic survey of the taxes involved in an estate plan.

The screen may be hard to view on the video. Click here for a copy of the slides to follow along.

Distribution Options for Your Beneficiaries

One of the main reasons cited for creating an estate plan is to care for loved ones. An estate plan allows you to expressly name beneficiaries to your estate, the methods by which the gifts will be distributed, how the distribution is administered, whether there are any conditions on the gifts, and so forth. Most people want to provide for family members, relatives, or close friends. This post will survey some common options for how you can make the gift.

Outright and free of trust

The most straightforward way to provide for someone is outright and free of trust. Upon your death (or your spouse’s death, or after the second of you to die, etc.), the gift is distributed to the intended beneficiary, and assuming they are above the age of 18, the gift is now owned by them. That’s it. For example, if you leave $40,000 to Person X, then upon your death, Person X receives $40,000 to do whatever they want. It works similarly for percentage or fractional gifts, like 25% of your estate, or 1/3 of your estate. The value is calculated, and when the distribution stage takes place, the beneficiary receives that gift as their own. The limitation to this method of giving is that you relinquish all control over the gift. If the beneficiary was going through some life challenges, like a divorce or a bankruptcy, your gift may end up never reaching the beneficiary at all. Or if they face significant debt, your life’s work may have ended up going straight into the hands of the beneficiary’s creditors.

Sometimes a little nuance is needed. Maybe dropping a large sum of money on someone isn’t the best idea under the circumstances.

In Trust

Leaving a gift in trust for someone can provide a lot of flexibility and oversight. This option creates a trust (a separate trust other than your living trust) naming your beneficiary as the beneficiary of this newly created trust. You also name the Trustee managing the assets held in trust. 

These trusts are created after your death. They are sometimes called “beneficiary trusts”,  “inheritance trusts”, “FBO trusts” (“for the benefit of”), “GST trusts” (generation skipping transfer), “dynasty trusts”, or “asset protection trusts”. For the most part, all of those terms can be interchangeable. They all describe an irrevocable trust set up for the benefit of someone other than yourself. “Irrevocable trust” means that the beneficiary is not able to change the terms of the trust (unlike your living trust, which is amendable during your life). The two main reasons someone may want to create irrevocable inheritance trusts is to 1) retain some control over the gift; and 2) protect the gift from the beneficiary’s creditors (think: the beneficiary’s ex-spouse in a divorce, a plaintiff in a judgment against the beneficiary, or from a bankruptcy). By keeping an inheritance in trust, the assets in trust will not “count” toward the assets of the individual beneficiary, and remain somewhat shielded from those creditors.

If you want to provide for a minor (a child under the age of 18), then a beneficiary trust is the way to go. You can name someone as Trustee of the trust to manage the gift for the benefit of the minor child, and that person does not need to be the child’s parent or guardian. You can specify when, if at all, the minor beneficiary is able to take over as Trustee of their inheritance.

Similarly, you can provide for someone who is financially immature or has addiction issues. A trust allows you to provide for someone even when they are not fully capable of providing for themselves.

Supplemental Needs Trust

Sometimes a beneficiary is receiving government assistance that is means-tested. For example, many MediCal and SSI/SSA benefits have eligibility requirements pertaining to a recipient’s income or net worth. If your beneficiary receives a lump sum inheritance, it could disrupt those benefits. The beneficiary would then need to use their inheritance for their care in place of the government benefits, and they would likely end up destitute, back on the government benefits. By leaving the inheritance in a supplemental needs trust, the trust can provide for the beneficiary without disrupting their means-tested assistance.

With trusts, you can place conditions on your gifts. For example, a common condition for parents is that their children be educated before receiving their inheritance. However, what may be clear in your head, may be ambiguous to someone carrying out your instructions. What does educated mean? Does the child need to earn a degree? Two year degree or four year degree? Does the institution need to be accredited? Does the institution need to be located in the United States? Can it be an online institution? You get the idea. You can place any condition on your gift that you like. However, an estate plan is only as effective as it is executable. There needs to be as little ambiguity in the trust terms as possible.

When you work with an estate planning professional, they will field all of the available options, discuss your goals, and assist you with matching your options and your goals. And after all that, an estate planning professional will make sure the documents are drafted correctly, with as little ambiguity as possible.

How Do You Select The Decision Makers in Your Estate Plan?

Determining what happens to your stuff after you die is only one aspect of an estate plan. And it’s not even the most critical part. The most critical component of any estate plan is the people involved. Who will act as your financial agent in a time of crisis? Who will make medical decisions for you? If you have minor children, who would you select to be their legal guardian? And then there’s your stuff. Where do your assets and possessions go after you die? And if you’re leaving any of it to young, immature, or unprepared individuals, who will you select to manage that inheritance for them?

Financial agents. “Financial agent” is a short hand to mean the successor trustee of your living trust, the executor of your will, and the attorney-in-fact under your power of attorney. The reason we have one umbrella term for these roles is because they all serve in making financial decisions for you when you are unable, and the three roles overlap so much that we recommend using a consistent list for all three.

So how do you choose your financial agents? It comes down to judgment. This is a decision making role. Choose someone who shares similar priorities, values, and decision making principles with you. Don’t worry about knowledge or expertise. With good judgment, one can always seek out the appropriate expert advice.

Guardians. Guardians are nominated to raise minor children–children under the age of 18 years. A good guardian is someone who shares your values. Are you religious? Do you like early bedtimes for your children? Is diet and nutrition important for your child? A good candidate for a guardian nomination would hold dear the same values that you do. Additionally, if your child is school-aged, it will be critical that the nominated guardian live local enough as to not uproot your now-orphaned child. Orphaned children have already gone through the trauma of losing their parents. They do not need the additional unease of living in unfamiliar surroundings, away from their friends and community.

Healthcare agents. The same goes for healthcare agents as was described previously about financial agents. You do not need to befriend a bunch of medical professionals to use as healthcare agents. You want someone who shares your judgment and values. They can speak to the medical professionals to get expert opinions and advice.

You can select the same person or persons for each or all of the roles above. But that is not required. It really comes down to your life situation and peace of mind. Would you want the person in charge of your child’s inheritance to also be the one who puts them to bed each night? Do you know someone who can make medical decisions for you and also handle your financial affairs? An experienced estate planning professional can help walk you through your life situation, priorities, and selections. And they can add their own experiences as additional guidance.

What is... a Trustee?

This is part of an on-going series of blog posts titled the "What Is..." series, where we attempt to explain, in simple terms, common estate planning terms and concepts. To read other posts in this series, click here.

A trustee is a person (or sometimes an institution, like a bank) who has the power to act on behalf of a trust. If you establish a living trust (as a trustor), then most of the time you will be the initial trustee. You act on behalf of the trust. 

As the trustor (also known as the person who established the trust), you also name successor trustees -- people who will act on behalf of the trust after you, either because you no longer want to, or you are not able to do so, or because you have passed away. 

As the trustee of your own living trust, nothing changes on a day-to-day basis. You even file taxes the same way. The living trust is more like a legal alias for you.

But what do your successor trustees do for your trust? Or, what do YOU do if you’re named as a successor trustee for someone else? 

In sum: the trustee’s job is to carry out the directions set forth in the trust document. 

There are some initial steps that a successor trustee must take after the death of the trustor. Please note that this is not an exhaustive list -- and this is exactly what we help with as attorneys. This is for informational purposes, to give you some idea of the responsibilities involved. 

First, the trustee must accept the position so that they can act on behalf of the trust. Then:

  1. In general, the trustee must notify the beneficiaries and heirs that they are beneficiaries of the trust.

  2. Certain government offices must be notified as well, depending on the trustor’s assets and benefits. For example, if the trustor owned real estate, then the assessor’s office must be notified. If the trustor was receiving social security benefits or Medi-Cal benefits, those agencies would need to be notified.

  3. The trustee must then inventory and determine the value of assets as of the date of the trustor’s death (e.g. appraisals of property, etc.). This is required to determine the value of the assets for tax purposes, and to provide an accounting of the trust property to the beneficiaries.

  4. In addition to handling an estate tax return, the trustee may be required to file the trustor’s final income tax return for the year that they died. The trustee may also have to file an income tax return if the trust estate earns money before it is all distributed to the beneficiaries. 

The trustee must then follow the instructions in the trust, within the boundaries of the law. This may include paying funeral expenses, outstanding credit card debts, etc. Some trusts have certain time periods during which the beneficiaries should receive a distribution, or they may have conditions that must be met before a beneficiary receives a distribution. Some trusts require waiting a certain period of time before the beneficiary receives a distribution, or the trust may contain outright restrictions on distribution. The trustee is tasked with interpreting and executing all of these instructions.

The trustee has a fiduciary duty to the trust. This means that just because they have the right to do something doesn’t mean that they should do it. For example, they may have the ability to sell trust assets like a home, but if they sell it for below the market value, or in a down market, they could have breached their fiduciary duty.

It’s important to know what the trust says to be able to execute its provisions and comply with the legal requirements. 

If you are a successor trustee for a loved one, please contact us for a free initial consultation. If you have a trust, and would like to ensure that it says what you want it to say for your trustee, please also contact us for an initial consultation.


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