Estate Planning Attorneys Lathrup Village : Probate & Elder Law Attorneys in Lathrup Village, MI

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Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Lathrup Village, Michigan

Lathrup Village Estate Planning & Probate Attorneys

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The Elder & Disability Law Firm, PLLC

TEL (586) 493-7661 |  Mount Clemens, MI

Birthplace: I was born in Mount Clemens. I grew up in Mount Clemens and I graduated from Mount Clemens High School. I'm one of Mount Clemens Battling Bathers. That's the name because the ...(more)



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ESTATE PLANNING, PROBATE & ELDER LAW NEWS

» Estate-planning seminar scheduled for Thursday

Elwyn D. Guernsey of Guernsey & Associates Inc. in Pensacola will present an estate-planning seminar Thursday at the Pensacola Opera Center.

» 5 Things You Need to Know About the Estate Tax in 2010: #3 (Trust Problems)

An effective estate plan should be flexible enough to accommodate changes in circumstances -- maybe not every change, but many of them. For instance, instead of specifically referencing the estate tax exemption amount when drafted, most well-drafted documents contain a formula based on the exemption amount in effect when the decedent dies. But does your estate plan account for the possibility that there will be NO federal estate tax when you die?

A lot of married couples have what's known as an A-B plan. If one spouse dies, two trusts are created for the survivor:

(A) Family Trust: usually containing an amount equal to the federal estate tax exemption amount at the death of the first to die

(B) Marital Trust: containing everything else owned by the first to die

The goal is no federal estate tax at the death of the first to die. The Family Trust is by definition exempt from federal estate tax, and the Marital Trust qualifies for the marital deduction (so is not subject to federal estate tax). The surviving spouse is the only beneficiary of the Marital Trust; the Family Trust's beneficiaries might be just the surviving spouse, the surviving spouse and kids of first to die, or just the kids of the first to die.

But what happens if there's no estate tax whatsoever? If the above language is used, the Family Trust isn't created (no exemption = no federal estate tax = no Family Trust). So there's just a Marital Trust.

Alternatively, you could draft a trust whereby the Marital Trust contains the "smallest amount that will result in no federal estate tax," and the Family Trust contains everything else. Under that scenario, no Marital Trust is created (the "smallest amount" would be $0). So there's just a Family Trust.

So what's the problem? There may not be one, if we're talking about a traditional nuclear family where the spouse is also the sole beneficiary of the Family Trust. But what if both spouses have children from a prior marriage? In that case, we may have a Family Trust of which the surviving spouse isn't the sole beneficiary (or not a beneficiary at all). And we run the risk, under the above scenarios, of either shortchanging the surviving spouse (no Marital Trust created) or shortchanging the kids (no Family Trust created).

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» Obama's 'Glass-Steagall lite' surprises even staunch supporters
 

» The Legal and Tax Aspects of Same-sex Relationships

We have half-day pricing options available . The member price is $129, non-member is $189, and law student is $70. To register for a half day , please call the CBA Member Service Center at 223-4400. The seminar will cover the representation of same-sex couples in estate planning, divorce, and immigration; trial and appellate tactics used by ...