T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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488.1 | Can be done, takes some prep work | TLE::JBISHOP | | Wed Jun 02 1993 19:15 | 41 |
| Here's my understanding, based on the books I've read:
1. You can avoid probate by gifts or trusts (may be more ways, too).
2. Up to ten thousand dollars per giver per recipient per year may
be given without gift tax liablity (e.g. two parents can give a
child and a spouse fourty thousand a year). If you wish, you may
give more and either pay gift tax or use up your $600,000 exclusion
from your future estate taxes. Since gift and estate tax rates
are similiar, it's usually best to take the second option, as it
defers the tax (time is money, etc.).
3. Gifts are not income, and you pay no tax on them.
4. Gifts given "in anticipation of death" don't get this exclusion,
and are counted in the estate. The IRS assumes anything given in
the last three years before death are such gifts _unless_ there
was no reasonable expectation of death (e.g. parent dies at 45 of
a car wreck)--I think there may also be an exception for gifts which
are part of a "regular plan", so if your parents have been giving
you $40K each year for 20 years, the last three don't count as part
of the estate--but you'd have to check on that.
Unless your parents are _very_ rich and quite old, they are legally
able to transfer basically all the money they want to you.
Various trust plans can maximize the use of the the $600,000
exemption that _each_ parent has. Consider two parents giving the max
yearly to a child, spouse, and two kids and maxing out on the
exemptions can give a grand total of $3.6 million without gift tax
or estate tax over thirty years.
The usual problem is that parents don't want to give it all away
while still alive, leaving large estates, and they don't want to
write wills.
In any case, your parents should consult an estate lawyer for details,
as states vary in things like inheritance taxes. They might also
want to consider a move to a low-tax state, depending on where they
live now.
-John Bishop
|
488.2 | Need info./advice on living trusts | USCTR1::ESULLIVAN | | Wed Mar 23 1994 10:13 | 30 |
|
Hi, any information about living trusts will be appreciated.
Several years ago my father's house was transferred to the 4 children
as a living trust (for him). He is now 86 and has been living in a
rest home for over a year. He does not want to live at home again
(and medically, couldn't) and he wants the children to sell the house.
It has been vacant during this time. He also has gone through all his
money > $125,000 for nursing home costs (my mother has been in a
nursing home for 3 years).
The house is very old and will definitely need $$$ to maintain it for
several more years, especially being vacant. We could rent it, but
again, we would need a lot of $$$ to update it, and still the house
would not be worth much more adding the additional costs (big ones)
to repair the house. All family members would like to sell the house.
Can we do this now since the property was transferred to the children
(all would pay their share of captial gains) and the transfer was set
up a living trust, which was recommended to the family? I do not
know what the tax liabilities would be -- capital gains, estate or
gift tax, or the State (Mass.) takes the house and we all pay taxes
plus lose the house? This is all very confusing and I wish that we
had never taken this advice. I would never recommend living trusts
for older parents (including yourself, as you will be one some day).
It is not worth it. The old adage is true, the only thing that is
certain is death and taxes.
Eleanor
|
488.3 | who really owns the house ? | HELIX::SPIELMAN | jerry dtn 297-4879 | Wed Mar 23 1994 11:14 | 39 |
| re .-1
>Several years ago my father's house was transferred to the 4 children
>as a living trust (for him).
This phrasing is technically likely to be incorrect. The assets in a
"living trust" are owned by the 'writer'/'owner' of the trust (I forget
the legal term). They could not have been transfered to the
"benficiaries" of the trust and still be part of the living trust.
So I suspect your father still owns the house. Therefore he can simply
agree to sell it. I believe the main points of a living trust are to
allow the 'owner' of the trust to retain control of his assets unless
he becomes incapacitated to do so (mentally or physically) and the
trust explicitly outlines who may "take charge" of his affairs.
I don't know the legal implications of selling his house under the use
of such a "take charge" situation. The money obtained from the sale
would still belong to the trust (not the beneficiaries).
Supposedly a main point of living trusts is to make it easier to pass
the "residual trust" (inheritance, should the owner die), to the
beneficiaries without Probate hassles. It may or may not save on
taxes.
If it is your father's intention to sell the house and gift the
proceeds to the beneficiaries that should be easy to arrange. He may
be able to use a 1 time $125,000 exemption on sale of a home to avoid
taxes on the sale.
I hope this gives you a start on determining what you may be able to
do. You should carefully understand what the living trust document
says, first and probably will have to consult an attorney to interpret
it.
|
488.4 | Need to understand living trust | USCTR1::ESULLIVAN | | Wed Mar 23 1994 11:43 | 8 |
|
O.k., thanks, Jerry, for the info. I can see that there is much I
do not understand and needs to be explained to me by a lawyer.
The only reference that I recognized was your mention of probate.
That rung a bell.
ems
|
488.5 | Wrong trust scenario | USCTR1::ESULLIVAN | | Thu Mar 24 1994 10:53 | 15 |
|
Jerry, I had the wrong scenario - it is not a living trust. The
house was transferred to the children with "right of survivorship" for
my father. I hope I have stated this correctly. So, the owners are the
children but my father has the right to live in the house, or, say -
agree to rent the house. However, now he says to sell the house, since
he has been in a rest home for over a year and does not want to return
home. I was not sure of the legal or tax consequences and whether or
not the family could sell it. We really do not want to rent the house
or keep it vacant for too long a period of time.
Regards,
Eleanor
|
488.6 | Engineer suggests attorney | HELIX::SPIELMAN | jerry dtn 297-4879 | Thu Mar 24 1994 19:48 | 25 |
| re: .-1
I am not an attorney. You probably can find a book in a library that
describes the basics of "trust type X" whatever type it actually is.
That may give you some basics. Then talk to an attorney.
I suspect there are as many types of trusts and interpretations on
what they mean as there are plants in the universe. Its not clear to me
who gets the proceeds if the house is sold. That probably depends on
how the trust is worded.
If there are multiple owners of the house now who have to pay taxes on
the sale, you should consult an accountant who has experience with the
situation, or perhaps an attorney (presumably a trust attorney should
be able to advise on tax consequences of such a sale).
If the attorney who drew up the trust is available, I'd go to him. He
may not charge you for initial information or for an interpretation
under the agreement. Try to find out from your father the business
arrangement with that attorney first. If the attorney is long gone,
you'll probably have to find a new one and pay to have him review the
document.
Good luck.
|
488.7 | Hindsight | USCTR1::ESULLIVAN | | Fri Mar 25 1994 08:07 | 6 |
|
The original attorney is long gone. I wish that I had understood
better at the time what the responsiblities and consequences would be.
Sigh....hindsight. I will contact an attorney shortly. Thanks.
ems
|
488.8 | Any good books? | TARKIN::TING | Albert Ting | Wed Apr 20 1994 13:43 | 6 |
| Could anyone recommend a good book or resource that explains how to avoid
Estate taxes? In particular, I want to understand how to setup a living
trust before I see a lawyer.
Thanks!
Albert
|
488.9 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed Apr 20 1994 17:16 | 1 |
| If you're trying to avoid estate taxes, invest in DEC stock. You'll die poor.
|