Blog of The Law Offices of Daniel Timins

How a Grandparent Should Gift Money to a New York 529 Plan

Funding a grandchild’s college education can be a beast: The amount of money that may have paid for your child’s four year undergraduate education may only pay for one year’s worth of tuition for your grandchild. This coupled with increasing housing costs and other relentless modern-day living expenses, make it hard for your children to adequately fund a 529 Plan to pay for your grandchildren’s college education.   Here are a few ownership and funding choices a grandparent may want to consider when funding a 529 Plan for a grandchild:   Open a 529 Plan as the Owner: Funding a 529 Plan is unlike most gifts. For most transfers, once you make a gift you have no way to get

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Disinheriting Someone? Don’t Use a “Pour-Over” Will

You have a right to leave money to who you want to and, when you have a will, can leave it to those you want: It is not uncommon to disinherit a family member who would otherwise receive an inheritance if no Will existed. However, your nearest family members (some of whom you may have disinherited) are required to receive a copy of the Will when you die. Clearly you do not want these disinherited people giving your choice of beneficiaries a hard time. Many people rightly resort to disinheriting an heir by bequeathing money using a Trust which has no requirement of placing such family members on legal notice. However, there is one regularly-used shortcut that can defeat your

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Minimizing Capital Gains Taxes: Being Conscious of Cost Basis

Of all the taxes that get reported by the press, capital gains taxes get the least exposure despite the significant impact they have on Americans. Yes, income taxes affect everyone who has ever received a paycheck, and estate taxes are in the news all the time (even though less than 6,000 estates owed federal estate taxes in 2015).  But it is capital gains taxes which are so often paid when they could have been avoided, capital gains taxes which get paid no matter what your income is, and capital gains taxes which may substitute estate taxes as government’s significant source of revenue if the estate tax is repealed by the in-coming Trump Administration and Republican Congress – and they will

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Why Trusts are Still Relevant in a Post-Estate Tax World

The Trump Administration is about to join forces with a Republican Legislature, meaning there is a huge chance that the federal gift and estate taxes could be repealed. I have heard many of my colleague bemoan the fact that their bread-and—butter (complex estate tax-saving trusts) will become irrelevant, their careers are over, and how they wish they went into Medical School or they are moving to Canada in January or something else equally insane.   While trusts have been useful devices to preserve a spouse’s estate tax exemption for Credit Shelter Trust purposes, this has by no means ever been their only purpose. Indeed, plenty of people already have trusts for a multitude of other purposes that shall continue to

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Trusts: How to Protect a (Troubled) Child from Your Money

Parents: You are responsible for the financial education and well-being of your child. You have more life experience, you are the ones who brought your children into the world, and you are the one leaving your money to them. So take the extra step and make sure you give your children money in a responsible way. We’ve all heard of it: The child who spent all of his inheritance before he received it, the gambler, the substance abuser, spendthrift, and so on. In 2011, I had a 29 year old female client, whom I shall call “Janice” who didn’t have one penny to her name: Janice was living in a homeless shelter, on all types of public assistance, and almost thoroughly ignored

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Leaving the Right Gift to the Right Person

I meet several clients who, upon death, want to automatically give their daughters their jewelry and split their remaining property equally between their children. This is also the default position suggested by general practitioner attorneys who will draft a two page Will for their lifetime client, and avoid the consultation time needed to truly understand their client’s desires. My experience suggests that serious consideration must be given to distributing the correct amount of property, and the right type of property,  to each beneficiary. Most people leave property first to their spouse, then to their children equally – they have equated equally loving their children with bequeathing them equal amounts of property. It goes without saying that even in “healthy” families this may not be

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How to Choose an Estate Planning Attorney

You may have some idea of how an Estate Planning Attorney can help you (Wills, Powers of Attorney, Health Care Proxies, Trusts), but may not know how to choose one. In addition to the questions you would ask any service professional, here are some thoughts and questions you may want to consider prior to signing a Retainer Agreement with the attorney, who will help you establish your estate plan: EXPERTISE: Does the attorney primarily practice New York estate planning, or are they a general practitioner licensed in multiple states? If your estate planning needs are relatively simple (minimal assets, you are married in a first marriage without kids, no disabled relatives) a general practitioner may suffice. However, I have also seen some horrible Wills drafted by

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What is a “Guardianship” for Disabled Individuals?

Many people think of a guardianship as being a legal affair that determines who will raise a minor child (such as a parent, or a non-parent if both parents are unavailable); I shall cover this type of guardianship in the future.  A Guardianship Proceeding over a disabled individual essentially takes place when a person can no longer make financial or health care decisions. There are  two types of Guardianship Proceedings: Those for minors who have always been disabled and are nearing the age of majority, and those for adults who once had mental capacity but no longer do. For people who are disabled as minors the Guardianship Proceeding takes place under New York’s Surrogate’s Court Procedures Act, Article 17-A (lawyers refer to this as a “SCPA 17

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Should I Serve as an Executor?

Most client I meet with name their most trusted family member or friend to serve as Executor of their Will when they pass away. Upon their death that person usually does serve; I would say approximately 90% of proposed Executors do serve in this position (if they themselves are still alive). These people think it will be “fun”, or that they “deserve to be in control” of the Probate. And then the wheels fall off: The Executor finds out that the decedent was a hoarder and has to clean out dumpsters of worthless garbage; beneficiaries fight, are impatient and ungrateful; collecting assets is hampered because they weren’t in easy-to-find places; the Executor lives in Los Angeles, but the decedent’s estate is being Probated

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“No Contest” Clauses in Wills

No family is perfect. Sometimes a child is mean or indifferent to parents’ needs as they age, while the others go out of their way to help. Though parents / aunts & uncles / grandparents may say they love all of their potential beneficiaries equally, the truth may be different. And (of course) there may be an obvious disincentive to leave the troubled beneficiary equal (if any) proceeds upon passing away. These clients tend to leave a lesser sum of money to the beneficiary in their Will, not realizing that the beneficiary may attack the Will, and line the pockets of a few attorneys and diminish the estate in the process. There has been a good deal of discussion recently surrounding

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