Estate Planning Attorneys Houston : Probate & Elder Law Attorneys in Houston, TX

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Attorneys

 

Estate Planning, Probate & Elder Law Houston, Texas

Houston Estate Planning & Probate Attorneys

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Results for: estate planning attorneys Houston. Browse listings to find an Elder Law or Probate Lawyer in Houston, TX.




The Behlmann Law Firm, LP

TEL (281) 398-0088 |  Katy, TX

Mr. Behlmann is Board Certified in Estate Planning & Probate Law by the Texas Board of Legal Specialization. As such the focus of his practice is estate planning, business counseling and wealth pr...(more)

Caldwell Law Firm

TEL (281) 461-9595 |  Houston, TX

The Mendel Law Firm, L.P.

TEL (281) 759-3213 |  Houston, TX

Stephen A. Mendel is a member of the American Academy of Estate Planning Attorneys, a national organization that serves the needs of legal professionals whose practices focus on estate planning and...(more)



Other Houston, Texas Estate Planning & Probate Law Firms (Basic Listings)

Apple & Cohen, Houston, TX  (713) 963-3637


Barber & Pi, L.L.P., Houston, TX  (713) 885-0041


Bradie, Bradie & Bradie, Houston, TX  (281) 440-6416


Deborah G. Frink, Houston, TX  (713) 863-1848


Hegwood & Associates, P.C., Houston, TX  (281) 333-0880


Kenneth H. Knop, P. C., Houston, TX  (713) 572/3482


Law Office Of Christopher Barber, Houston, TX  (281) 464-LAWS


Law Office Of Lawrence F. Dietlein, Jr., Houston, TX  (713) 650-1222


Law Office Of Michele O'brien P.C. , Houston, TX  (713) 960.8543


Leigh B. Meineke, Houston, TX  (713) 463-6000





ESTATE PLANNING, PROBATE & ELDER LAW NEWS

» 5 Things You Need to Know About the Estate Tax in 2010: #1 (Capital Gains)

Up through 2009 (and starting again in 2011, assuming the law isn't changed), there was a federal estate tax. That was and will be the bad part, at least for people who owed or will owe tax.

The good part was that, in exchange for potentially being subject to the estate tax, you got a "step-up" in basis. Essentially, when an individual died, his or her assets took as their basis for capital gains purposes their fair market value as of the date of death. So, to consider an example,...

Mom buys a bunch of stock in Company X, starting in 1950 and continuing to her death. The actual cost basis for her purchases was $15,000.

Mom dies, and her Company X stock is work $500,000.

Mom's three kids are left the Company X stock under Mom's Will.

What is the basis in the Company X stock? During a year in which there's an estate tax, that's easy: it's $500,000. So, if the kids sell the stock after Mom's death, they pay capital gains on the difference between the sale price and $500,000.

But how is this handled in 2010? There are three main rules:

1. Instead of a step-up in basis, we have a carryover basis regime. So the basis in Company X would be $15,000. But...

2. There is still a step-up in basis for $1.3 million of assets passing to beneficiaries who aren't the decedent's spouse. And...

3. There is a step-up in basis for $3 million of assets passing to the decedent's spouse.

The major problem with a carryover basis regime is that, in many cases, it is difficult or impossible to calculate the decedent's basis in his or her property. (From what I have read, this was the problem when carryover basis was briefly made the law, back in 1976.) And I worry that the biggest result of this change in the law will be full employment for America's forensic accountants.

» Oklahoma State U., T. Boone Pickens tangle with Lincoln National
 

» States Race To Clean Up Congress' Estate Tax Mess
Legislators aim to head off expensive court fights and widows left out in the cold.

» Brooke Astor Saga Reaches Conclusion

I reviewed Meryl Gordon's book Mrs. Astor Regrets earlier this year (here) -- it was one of my favorite books I read in 2009.

The trial of Mrs. Astor's son, Anthony Marshall, is coming to a conclusion (barring appeals). Mr. Marshall was found guilty of "looting his mother's fortune" (another lawyer, Francis X. Morrissey Jr., was also found guilty) -- here is the story. I can't understand why the maximum sentence is only 3 years -- why is that? Because Mr. Marshall is rich? Ugh.

I'm also a little troubled by this line in the article:

The judge noted Marshall's World War II service and the possibility that the late Astor herself would have been aghast to see her son imprisoned, but he added that the law left him no choice but to impose a prison term.

1. Would Mrs. Astor REALLY have been aghast, in light of what her son did to her?

2. I realize that many people want to give members of The Greatest Generation a free pass (and unlimited free health care, free prescriptions, etc.) as a result of their actions in World War II, but I can't figure out why Mr. Marshall's heroics 60+ years ago have any bearing on this case.

» 2-Star Stocks Poised to Plunge: MetLife?
Market-lagging returns could be written in these two stars.