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Provided by:

Thomas J. Ray, Jr.
3520 Jeffco Boulevard, Suite 110
Arnold, MO 63010
Telephone: (636) 464-8353
Fax: (636) 464-2797
website: www.raylawoffices.com
email:
Additional Office located
in
Creve Coeur.
Committed to providing the highest quality
estate planning legal services for individuals, families and
businesses |
His, Hers & Theirs
Here are two trivia questions for you movie and television buffs.
First, what big name Hollywood stars played on-screen spouses in the
1968 film Yours, Mine & Ours? The basic storyline of the
movie paired a widow and her eight children with a widower and his
ten children. Second, a year later Sherwood Schwartz (creator of Gilligan's
Island) took the same basic storyline and rolled out a hit
television series that ran for 117 episodes. Can you name that show?
[The answers are at the end of this article.]
One reason commonly given for the
popularity of these two classics is that they gave traditional
nuclear families a lighthearted glimpse into the lives of blended
families. Times have changed. In the new millennium, blended
families now outnumber traditional nuclear families. And the number
is likely to grow, based on current statistics and trends.
Unlike the movies or 30-minute sitcoms,
real life is not always so lighthearted for blended families,
whether due to widowhood or divorce. Many face unique social,
psychological and economic challenges.
The Challenges
More than 60 percent of second marriages
end in divorce. Certainly some blame for that sad statistic lies in
the difficulty of successfully blending formerly separate families.
Fortunately, there are numerous organizations and support groups
dedicated to helping blended families with these challenges.
Unfortunately, little attention has been paid to the critical Life
& Estate Planning challenges confronting blended families. These
challenges include disinheriting your ex-spouse, protecting
your own children, providing for your new spouse and minimizing
your estate taxes.
Your Ex-Spouse
Without proper legal planning, your
ex-spouse (as surviving parent/guardian) would likely be appointed
by the probate court to manage the inheritance you leave to your
children. To make matters worse, what if your children later
predecease your ex-spouse, and are single and childless at that
time? Who would inherit your assets then? That is right ... your
ex-spouse, as the next-of-kin of your children.
Your New Spouse
Chances are you made a few solemn
promises to your new spouse on your wedding day. Among them were
promises to be there through thick and thin, personally and
financially. Accordingly, most spouses in blended families tend to blend
their wealth, too.
Warning: If you predecease your new spouse,
then you may forever disinherit your own children from your share of
such blended wealth! Thereafter, upon the death of your new spouse,
your assets may be inherited by your stepchildren, or even by your
new spouse's next spouse and their children.
Your Own Children
Regardless of whether children are
reared in a traditional nuclear family or in a blended family, great
care should be given to protect any inheritance both for them
and from them. Wealth representing a lifetime of your hard
work and thrift can be squandered in very short order, or can
quickly vanish through divorces, lawsuits and bankruptcies.
Your Estate Taxes
Aside from disinheriting your own
children, blending your wealth with your new spouse may
unnecessarily enrich the IRS. How? The Internal Revenue Code
provides an exemption to each taxpayer for purposes of sheltering a
certain estate dollar value from federal estate taxes (with marginal
rates reaching nearly 50 percent). However, this is a use it or
lose it exemption and you lose it when title to your blended
assets vests in your new spouse upon your death. In addition to
disinheriting your own children, this mistake alone can trigger
hundreds of thousands of dollars in unnecessary estate taxes.
Answers:
First answer: Henry Fonda and Lucille
Ball.
Second answer: The Brady Bunch, of
course!
Estate Equalization
Quick. If your family is a blended family, would you rather
disinherit your new spouse or your own children? Without proper
planning it likely will be one or the other. Either way it is a
lose-lose proposition.
Alternatively, what if you could create a
plan that actually may increase your overall estate value, without
increasing your estate value for death tax purposes, and may allow
you to equalize the inheritance left to your new spouse and to your
own children?
First Things First
Before continuing, however, you should
know that your insurability for life insurance is the financial
planning key to making this win-win inheritance arrangement work. It
is an age-old financial planning maxim that your health actually
buys your life insurance and your wealth merely pays the premiums.
Assuming you are insurable, we now turn to the legal planning.
Your New Spouse
To provide financial security for your
new spouse and to minimize your estate tax exposure, arrange for an Estate
Tax Exemption Trust (ETE Trust) and a Qualified Terminable
Interest Property Trust (QTIP Trust) to be created under either
your Last Will and Testament or your Revocable Living Trust. Through
this arrangement you may maximize your estate tax savings as you
provide income and even principal to your new spouse for life.
Thereafter, upon the death of your new spouse, the assets of both
Trusts may pass to your own children.
Your Own Children
Having taken care of your new spouse, we
now shift our focus to providing a concurrent inheritance for your
own children.
First, you create an Irrevocable Life
Insurance Trust (ILIT) with your own children as the beneficiaries.
Select the amount of life insurance that will represent their
inheritance upon your death, according to your estate equalization
goals. Note: While you may not serve as a Trustee, you may select
the current and successor Trustees.
Second, you make gifts to the Trustee on
behalf of your beneficiaries in an amount roughly equal to the
insurance premiums. The Trustee then provides written notice of the
completed gift to each ILIT beneficiary, giving each a designated
period of time (not less than 30 days is typical) to request
distribution of their respective share of the gift. After the
designated period has lapsed, the Trustee applies for the
appropriate amount of Life Insurance and pays the initial premium.
[Note: This annual gifting ritual continues until your death.]
Third, assuming all of the ILIT steps have
been followed, the death benefit will be estate tax free when paid
to the ILIT for your own children. Properly structured, this
inheritance will be protected both for and from your own children,
as well. Later, upon the death of your new spouse, the assets of the
ILIT may be merged with the assets of the ETE Trust and the QTIP
Trust for more economical and efficient administration for your own
children (and even grandchildren).
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