Estate Planning
Periodically our
partners and estate planning professionals
provide us with articles on current
estate planning topics.
FAMILY WEALTH COUNSELING – Consider
ALL the Aspects
by Doyle E. Richardson
"Creative estate planning practitioners have
long been able to design financially eye-popping
solutions for the efficient transfer of wealth.
Yet, despite their ability to make the numbers “fly
off the page,” financial solutions have
proven to be no guarantee that a plan will be
implemented or, if implemented, that the accumulated
wealth will be retained by the next generation."
Click on icon to download the entire article. |
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USING
YOUR IRA TO “LEAVE A LEGACY®®”
By Robin Hicks-Connors,
CFRE
"For many
individuals, the IRA assets they accumulated
under favorable market
conditions
have exceeded their expectations – and
needs – and have become less necessary
for their retirement. These funds could be
used, at least in part, for charitable giving."
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on icon to download the entire article. |
 |
 |

Additional
Information
For additional information on
planned giving and making charitable gifts through
wills and estate plans, contact the following websites:
LEAVE A LEGACY® National Website
www.leavealegacy.org
National Council on Planned Giving
www.ncpg.org

Glossary of Terms
Administrator The person appointed by the court to
manage one's estate when he or she dies without leaving
a will. Administrators have the same duties as executors.
Annuity A sum of money payable yearly or at other
regular intervals.
Annuitant An individual who receives or is qualified
to receive an annuity.
Appreciated Assets Assets that have a higher market
value than their basis or tax purpose value. Sale
of such assets may generate a taxable capital gain
(either long-term or short-term depending on the
holding period).
Appreciated Property Property, such as real estate
or stock, which has increased in value.
Attorney - or lawyer - The person licensed by the
state to practice law and assist the executor, trustee,
and guardian. It is conceivable that each could hire
a separate attorney, but usually one attorney represents
all three.
Basis The tax purpose value of the property or asset
used in establishing the potential capital gains
amount.
Beneficiary An individual designated to receive benefits
or funds under a will or other contract, such as
an insurance policy, trust or retirement plan.
Bequest To give or leave something by will, typically
personal property or assets.
Bypass Trust Trust set up to avoid or bypass the
surviving spouse's estate, which enables each spouse
to use the federal estate tax exemption.
Charitable Gift Annuity Typically an agreement in
which you transfer cash or other assets to a charitable
organization in exchange for its promise to pay you
an annuity for life or for a term of years.
Charitable Trust A trust having a charitable organization
as a beneficiary.
Charitable Lead Trust During the term or life of
the charitable lead trust, an annuity or unitrust
income interest is distributed each year to the designated
charitable beneficiary and the assets are eventually
transferred to the trustor's or grantor's designated
non-charitable beneficiary(ies).
Charitable Remainder Annuity
Trust A trust which
is set up to pay a return or fixed annual percentage
of 5 percent (or more) of the net fair market value
of the assets placed in the trust. The trust assets
are valued initially, at the time the property is
placed in the trust. The trust assets are never revalued.
Charitable Remainder Unitrust A trust which is set
up to pay a return or fixed annual percentage of
5 percent (or more) of the net fair market value
of the assets placed in the trust. The trust assets
are revalued annually.
Codicil A legal instrument made to modify an earlier
will.
Corporate Fiduciary An institution that acts for
the benefit of another. One example is a bank acting
as trustee.
Cost Basis The original value of an asset, such as
stock, before its appreciation or depreciation.
Durable Power of Attorney A written legal document
that lets an individual designate another person
to act on his or her behalf, even in the event the
individual becomes disabled or incapacitated.
Estate Tax A tax imposed at one's death on the transfer
of most types of property.
Executor (or Personal Representative) The person
named in a will to manage the estate. This person
will collect the property, pay any debt and distribute
your property or assets according to the will.
Fiduciary A person or institution legally responsible
for the management, investment and distributions
of funds. Examples include trustees, executors and
administrators.
Gift Tax Tax on gifts generally paid by the person
making the gift, rather than the recipient.
Gift-Tax Annual Exclusion The provision in the tax
law that exempts the first $11,000 (2002 and 2003)
in present-interest gifts a person gives to each
recipient during a year from federal gift taxes.
Therefore, you generally can give up to $11,000 each
to any number of people in 2002 and 2003 and none
of the gifts will be taxable.
Grantor The person who transfers assets into a trust
for the benefit of another.
Gross Estate The total property or assets held by
an individual as defined for federal estate tax purposes.
Guardian An individual legally appointed to manage
the rights and/or property of a person incapable
of taking care of his or her own affairs.
Inter vivos A type of trust created during one's
lifetime to hold property for the benefit of another
person.
Interest Any right or ownership in property.
Intestate The term applied when an individual dies
without a will.
Joint Ownership The ownership of property by two
or more people, usually with the right of survivorship.
Joint Tenancy A type of ownership where any two or
more persons, related or not, may hold (own) property
and the property passes to the survivor or survivors
on the death of one. This passing is not automatic,
as some think, and the procedure for passing will
depend on local law. But, this form of ownership
does have the advantage of allowing property to pass
to the survivor without delays of probate and court
administration costs.
Life Insurance Trust A trust that has the proceeds
of an individual's life insurance policy as its principal.
Living Trust A revocable trust established by a grantor
during his or her lifetime in which the grantor transfers
some or all of his or her property into the trust.
Living Will A legal document directing that the maker's
or signer's life is not to be artificially supported
in the event of a terminal illness or accident.
Marital Deduction A deduction allowing for the unlimited
transfer of any or all property from one spouse to
the other generally free of estate and gift tax.
Pooled Income Fund - also a Charitable Remainder
Pooled Income Fund - is an investment fund much like
a mutual fund. It is made up of transfers by many
persons to the fund who receive life income interest
in exchange for their transfers, based on the value
of the transfer into the fund and based on the income
earned by the fund.
Power of Attorney A written legal document that gives
an individual the authority to act for another.
Powers of Appointment A
right given to another in a written instrument, such
as a will or trust that
allows the other to decide how to distribute the
property. The power of appointment is "general" if
it places no restrictions on whom the distributees
may be. A power is "limited" or "special" if
it limits the eventual distributee.
Probate The court process for determining the validity
of a deceased person's will.
Qualified Terminal Interest
Property Trust (QTIP) A trust often set up to avoid transfer tax on the
first spouse's death. The deceased spouse establishes
the ultimate disposition of the property, rather
than the surviving spouse including the property
in their estate. During their lifetime, the surviving
spouse receives all income from the principal and,
in some cases, has access to the principal.
Retained Life Estate A gift plan defined by federal
tax law allowing the donation of a personal residence
(to include a vacation home) or farm with the donor
retaining the right to life enjoyment. A life estate
may be retained for one or more lives or it may be
retained for a term of years. All routine expenses
- maintenance fees, property taxes, repairs, etc.
- are the responsibility of the donor. The donor
receives income tax benefits in the year of the gift
(the property is irrevocably deeded to the charity)
and estate tax benefits.
Tenants in Common A property ownership arrangement
in which two or more persons own property jointly.
It is not necessary that the ownership consist of
equal shares or percentages of the property. Generally
there is no right of survivorship when a co-owner
dies. The share of the property belonging to the
deceased co-owner passes to his or her heirs and
the shares of the remaining original co-owners do
not change.
Testamentary Trust A trust that is created upon death
by the terms of a person's will.
Testator An individual who dies leaving a will or
testament in force.
Trust A written legal instrument created by a grantor
during his or her lifetime or at death for the benefit
of another.
Trustee The
individual or institution entrusted with the duty
of managing property placed in the trust.
A "co-trustee" serves as trustee with another.
A "contingent trustee" becomes trustee
upon the occurrence of a specified future event.
Trustor The individual who establishes the trust. Also
referred to as the Grantor and/or Settlor.
Unified Credit A federal tax credit that offsets gift-tax
and estate-tax liability. The unified credit is being
increased gradually
| Decedent dying in: |
Exclusion amount: |
| 2003 |
$1,000,000 |
| 2004 and 2005 |
$1,500,000 |
| 2006, 2007 and 2008 |
$2,000,000 |
| 2009 |
$3,500,000 |
A unified credit of $202,050
is available to offset both estate and gift taxes.
Any part of the credit
used to offset gift taxes is not available to offset
estate taxes. As a result, although they are still
taxable as gifts, lifetime taxable transfers no longer
cushion the impact of progressive estate tax rates.
Lifetime transfers and transfers made at death are
combined for estate tax rate purposes.
Will A legally executed document that directs how and
to whom a person's property is to be distributed after
death.
