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Atricle Dump - Wills, Trusts and Durable Powers of Attorney
Get These Work At Home Internet Jobs While They're Hot! ccounts into the trust.Work at home internet jobs...wow...how nice does that sound? How perfect would one of those affect your life and the lives of everyone around you?If you're like me, landing one of these work at home internet jobs was the ultimate goal.In fact in 2007, more Americans than ever before, are looking to find better and better ways to stay at home and work. We all know about the growing trend for moms to want to stay home on the 'net, but more fathers than ever before are getting the itch.And for good reason.By eliminating the commute alone, people are suddenly find new three hour segments to their day. While many people tend to underestimate their REAL commute time, a more accurate measure of it is time when you step out of your door to time when you arrive at work.By being honest, you'll find that you've been guilty of doing that undervaluing. But when you shift gears and put your effort into finding work at home internet jobs in particular, you'll immediately find that the reverse is true. After you start working from home with your computer you'll naturally tell people what your REAL door to door commute really was.The number of work from home internet jobs is growing and CHANGING every day. People are discovering new niches below the newest niches. And that's a great thing because that means new and fresher content will be added to the framework of the internet every day.Meaning when you find one of the work at home internet jobs that suits YOU best, you will be adding value to the big boys...the search engines. And they will love you for it. v. Personal property (jewelry, furniture, artwork, etc.) can be placed in the trust just by mentioning them correctly in the trust document(s). vi. Title is generally transferred to the trust by designating the owner along the following lines: “John and Mary Smith, Trustees of the 2005 Smith Family Trust”. b. Ownership of retirement accounts (IRA’s, 401(k)’s, Keogh’s) generally should not be transferred to the trust, because doing so will trigger adverse tax consequences. 10. Beneficiary Designations a. Certain items – the proceeds of life insurance policies and survivor rights in retirement accounts – usually are not governed by the provisions of a trust or will, since they are contractual arrangements. Instead, one designates the beneficiaries by completing the forms provided when the life insurance policy is taken out or the retirement account is created. b. Generally, you can change the beneficiaries at any time by filing out the proper forms. i. One exception is with retirement plans. With these, you normally must make your spouse the primary beneficiary unless your spouse signs a written waiver. c. The beneficiaries of a life insurance policy generally receive the proceeds free of federal income tax. As noted previously, though, the amount of the proceeds will count toward the net estate for purposes of the Unified Credit if the insured retained any “incidents of ownership”. d. Basically, the only time married individuals should not name each other as primary beneficiaries on life insurance policies and retirement accounts is when their estates (including individually owned life insurance benefits) exceed the Unified Credit (or twice the Unified Credit, if they have the proper type of trust) and would trigger estate taxes. (As noted before, money that survivors receive from individual retirement accounts counts towards the net estate for purposes of the Unified Credit.) i. An exception is when the surviving spouse – perhaps due to incapacity, ill health or lack of experience in financial matters -- may not have the ability to manage the money. In that case it may be better to designate a trust as the recipient of the life insurance proceeds and survivor benefits of retirement plans. e. While spouses who are designated as beneficiaries of retirement plans are usually eligible for a tax-free transfer to an individual retirement account or another pension plan, non-spouse beneficiaries are not. i. When the retirement funds are not rolled over, there is income tax, since any time money comes out of a retirement account there is tax. ii. On the other hand, retirement plan companies can now spread the retirement plan distributions over the life of the beneficiary – minimizing the income-tax impact. As a result, the tax issue here is much less of a problem than before. Contact your company for details. f. In an How to Recognize a Good CAD Drafting Service Provider 1. California LawOnce you locate a prospective CAD drafting service provider, look for the following:>> They should be technically skilledGive them a sample to do and see if their output is accurate>> They should be deadline-orientedThey should deliver on the nail every time>> They should understand technical English wellA lot of tech-talk is involved in any CAD drafting outsourcing exercise. The provider should be fluent in CAD-speak. Talk the language and see if they comprehend>> They should be good communicatorsIf you email them, you should get an answer in 24 hours. If you ask for something, they should act on your request immediately>> They should have labor resourcesIf you occasionally have more than the usual work for them to do, they should have spare labor so that your other delivery schedules are minimally affected>> They should have strong references or testimonialsOut of the two, a reference that you can inquire with is always better than a non-verifiable testimonial>> They should have a strong set of Internet toolsLike these: An ftp server, a broadband connection, a backup email address and Skype. Most importantly, they should have a screen-sharing application (where you can see their screen in real time) so that you can look at drawings together online>> Their decision-maker should always be accessible to youThis way policy decisions (like those concerning pricing, extended services and joint ventures) will be swift and the outsourcing relationship will evolve faster.There you have it. If you see all these characteristics in a CAD drafting service provider, grab them fast!Good luck and may you prosper from these guidelines.Copyright 2005 The Magnum Group This document discusses California law only. Each state has its own laws for dealing with wills, trusts and powers of attorney. 2. Durable Power of Attorney for Finances a. Durable powers of attorney for finances allow someone else to handle your finances for you. They come in two basic types: i. A “springing” durable power of attorney allows your agent to handle your financial affairs (such as paying bills) if you become incapacitated. (1) If you regain capacity, your agent loses this power – unless and until you become incapacitated again. ii. An “immediate” durable power of attorney goes into effect immediately, regardless of whether you are incapacitated or not. (1) This type of power of attorney stays in effect until a specified date is reached, a specified event occurs, or the person who made it revokes it. (2) It is often used when a person is losing capacity or when the maker is going to be out of the country for an extended period of time. b. If you don’t have a durable power of attorney for finances and you become incapacitated, often the only thing your family (or friends) can do is go to court and obtain a conservatorship. This can take months and is very expensive. c. Frequently your spouse (or partner) is your primary agent, and then adult children or friends are the successor agents in case your primary (or subsequent) agent is unable (due to incapacity, etc.) or unwilling to act on your behalf. d. Powers of attorney expire on the death of the principal (the person giving the power of attorney) – so they cannot be used in place of a will or trust. 3. Advanced Health Care Directive a. In California, this used to be known as a durable power of attorney for healthcare. b. This is designed to allow your agent to make health-care decisions for you if you are incapacitated. c. Unlike with a power of attorney for finances, an advanced health care directive cannot be immediate; instead it must be springing. This makes sense: if the principal has capacity, he/she should be making his/her own health decisions. d. An Advanced Health Care Directive also: i. Allows your agent to have access to your medical records. ii. Gives your agent priority over anyone else in making health decisions for you. iii. Allows you to express your desire regarding life-sustaining medical treatment. For example, many people have the document state something like the following: It is my express wish and expectation that I not receive life-prolonging medical treatment that merely delays inevitable death if the burdens of treatment outweigh the anticipated benefits. iv. Allows you to express your desire regarding organ donations, autopsies and disposition of your remains. (This same information should be placed in the will and/or the trust, since powers of attorney expire on the death of the principal.) 4. Capacity Issues a. Frequently springing durable powers of attorney for finances and advanced health care directives state that two physicians must certify in writing that the principal is incapacitated. Often it’s difficult to obtain this, since physicians are concerned about liability. b. One alternative is say something like the following: For purposes of this instrument, I shall be deemed "incapacitated" if certified in writing by any two people falling within the following categories: My spouse, if any. Any successor trustee to any revocable trust created by me. Any actual or potential agent specified in this power of attorney. Any actual or potential executor specified in my will. The following named persons: Any licensed physician not related by blood or marriage me nor to any beneficiaries of any trust or will created by me. 5. Unified Federal Gift and Estate Tax Credit a. There is a Unified Credit against federal gift and estate taxes as follows (based on the net estate): Year of Death Unified Credit (net estate) 2002-2003 $1,000,000 2004-2005 $1,500,000 2006-2008 $2,000,000 2009 $3,500,000 2010 Unlimited 2011 $1,000,000 b. Individual retirement accounts are counted as part of the net estate. i. Where an irrevocable trust holds an insurance policy and is specifically prohibited from exercising any power normally conferred on the owner of a policy, the proceeds of the policy are not counted as part of the estate. c. Life insurance proceeds are counted toward the net estate if either i) they are received by the estate or ii) they are received by other beneficiaries and the deceased had any “incidents of ownership” in the policy. d. Note the drop in the Unified Credit between 2010 and 2011. Everyone assumes that Congress will do something about this before 2011, although at the moment some wags refer to 2010 as “throw momma from the train” year. 6. Agreements Between Spouses Regarding the Status of Property a. Sometimes spouses, as part of estate planning, want to confirm in writing that certain property is community property or separate property. b. Such agreements often provide that joint tenancies (which have a right of survivorship) are really community property. This creates a new income tax basis for both halves of the community property on the death of either spouse; joint tenancy assets generally receive a new basis only for the decedent’s one-half share. i. On the other hand, with large estates (in excess of $1.5 million), joint tenancy with right of survivorship may avoid estate taxes since the property does not become part of the deceased’s estate. This, though, has to be weighed against not receiving a new basis for one-half of the property. c. Note that since July 1, 2001, the community interest of a husband and wife may be held as community property with right of survivorship. This provides the best of both worlds. d. As of January 1, 2005, community property law also applies to domestic partners who have registered with the California Secretary of State. i. Registration with counties, cities or employers does not count for this purpose. ii. Those who have already registered do not have to re-register unless one of the pair filed to terminate the registration at some point. iii. The tax benefits of community property, though, will only apply with respect to California taxes, not federal taxes. 7. Reason to Have at Least a Will a. If you do not have at least a will, then California law determines who receives your estate. This may not be what you want to have happen. b. Where someone dies without a will, California will generally distribute the estate as follows: i. If there is a surviving spouse, that spouse receives: (1) All community property. (2) As to the decedent’s separate property (if any): (a) All of it if the decedent did not leave any surviving issue, parent, brother, sister, or issue of a deceased brother or sister. (b) One half if the decedent has only one child or has one deceased child with issue. (c) One half if the decedent leaves no issue but leaves a parent or parents – or leaves their issue or the issue of either of them. (d) One-third if the decedent leaves more than one child, leaves one child and the issue of one or more deceased children, or leaves issue of two or more deceased children. ii. The rest goes first to the decedent’s surviving children or, if any of them are deceased, to the children’s surviving issue. iii. If the decedent has no surviving children or deceased children with surviving issue, the rest goes to: (1) The decedent’s parents, if living. (2) The decedent’s brothers and sisters (or their issue if any of them are deceased). 8. Reasons to Have a Trust a. Normally, unless a trust has been created, an estate must be probated. i. If, though, the gross value of the estate is $100,000 or less (without subtracting any liens, debts, deeds of trust, etc.), there are simple procedures for distributing an estate without using formal probate proceedings. ii. In addition, all property that a surviving spouse is entitled to receive may be handled with simplified procedures. iii. Even in these two cases, probate still may be appropriate, though, if there are strained family relations, complex investments, large or complex claims by creditors, or an interest in a good-sized business. b. There are two problems with probate: i. It often takes 8 to 10 months. (It can take even longer.) During that time, if the family needs money from the estate, a motion has to be brought and a court order obtained. In contrast, with a trust, there is no probate and the beneficiaries receive the money immediately. ii. Probate is expensive. Attorneys’ fees are set as follows and are based on the gross estate, meaning that there is no subtraction for any liens, debts, deeds of trust, etc.: (1) Four percent on the first one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000). (2) Three percent on the next one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000). (3) Two percent on the next eight hundred thousand dollars ($800,000). (4) One percent on the next nine million dollars ($9,000,000). (5) One-half of 1 percent on the next fifteen million dollars ($15,000,000). (6) For all amounts above twenty-five million dollars ($25,000,000), a reasonable amount to be determined by the court. For example, if your estate is a house worth $700,000, then the probate fees for the attorney will be $17,000 ($4,000 + $3,000 + $10,000) – regardless of the size of any loans against the property. iii. The executor of a will is also entitled to statutory fees, although the executor can waive those fees if he/she wishes (and family members often do). c. A trust can also be used for some tax planning. d. A revocable trust can be set up to create, upon the first spouse’s death, a “marital deduction trust” (which is usually either a QTIP Trust or a Life Estate with Power of Appointment Trust) and a “credit shelter trust” (also known as a Remainder Trust, B Trust, or Bypass Trust). The advantage of doing this is that it effectively doubles the Unified Credit. e. Complex estates (basically those where the net value of the estate is at least twice the Unified Credit for spouses and equal to the Unified Credit for singles) may also use various irrevocable trusts, certain charitable gifts, generation-skipping trusts, etc. i. One example is an irrevocable insurance trust, where an irrevocable trust is made the beneficiary of life insurance policies. (1) If insurance is owned by an irrevocable trust, the insured should not serve as trustee. ii. Another example is a charitable remainder trust: donating a highly appreciated piece of real property such as a residence to a charity – and receiving a charitable donation – but retaining the right to remain there for life. 9. Revocable Trust Assets a. For a trust to be effective, most major assets have to be transferred to the trust so that the trust owns them. i. With real estate, this means that a deed has to be prepared transferring title to the trust, and then the deed filed with the County Recorder’s Office. ii. With stock brokerage accounts, the brokerage company’s forms must be completed. Often the signature has to be confirmed (witnessed) by stock broker. iii. With savings accounts, the bank’s forms must be completed. iv. It’s usually more trouble than it’s worth to put cars (unless they are extremely valuable) or day-to-day checking accounts into the trust. v. Personal property (jewelry, furniture, artwork, etc.) can be placed in the trust just by mentioning them correctly in the trust document(s). vi. Title is generally transferred to the trust by designating the owner along the following lines: “John and Mary Smith, Trustees of the 2005 Smith Family Trust”. b. Ownership of retirement accounts (IRA’s, 401(k)’s, Keogh’s) generally should not be transferred to the trust, because doing so will trigger adverse tax consequences. 10. Beneficiary Designations a. Certain items – the proceeds of life insurance policies and survivor rights in retirement accounts – usually are not governed by the provisions of a trust or will, since they are contractual arrangements. Instead, one designates the beneficiaries by completing the forms provided when the life insurance policy is taken out or the retirement account is created. b. Generally, you can change the beneficiaries at any time by filing out the proper forms. i. One exception is with retirement plans. With these, you normally must make your spouse the primary beneficiary unless your spouse signs a written waiver. c. The beneficiaries of a life insurance policy generally receive the proceeds free of federal income tax. As noted previously, though, the amount of the proceeds will count toward the net estate for purposes of the Unified Credit if the insured retained any “incidents of ownership”. d. Basically, the only time married individuals should not name each other as primary beneficiaries on life insurance policies and retirement accounts is when their estates (including individually owned life insurance benefits) exceed the Unified Credit (or twice the Unified Credit, if they have the proper type of trust) and would trigger estate taxes. (As noted before, money that survivors receive from individual retirement accounts counts towards the net estate for purposes of the Unified Credit.) i. An exception is when the surviving spouse – perhaps due to incapacity, ill health or lack of experience in financial matters -- may not have the ability to manage the money. In that case it may be better to designate a trust as the recipient of the life insurance proceeds and survivor benefits of retirement plans. e. While spouses who are designated as beneficiaries of retirement plans are usually eligible for a tax-free transfer to an individual retirement account or another pension plan, non-spouse beneficiaries are not. i. When the retirement funds are not rolled over, there is income tax, since any time money comes out of a retirement account there is tax. ii. On the other hand, retirement plan companies can now spread the retirement plan distributions over the life of the beneficiary – minimizing the income-tax impact. As a result, the tax issue here is much less of a problem than before. Contact your company for details. f. In any Information About Article Marketing - A Basic Introduction Overview For Newbies! cipal.)In this article we provide you with some overview information about article marketing, and how you can use it to promote your website, product, service, or business.First of all, what is Article Marketing and how does it work?Article marketing uses "article directories" which are massive databases of articles, set up in categories based on niches of subjects and sub-niches of subjects.There are millions of active websites out there that are looking for good content to upload, and E-zine publishers that are also looking for good content about their niche for their readers. The primary way that these website owners can find content is through article directories: EzineArticles.comcontentdesk.comgoarticles.com Where do these articles come from?From people who write articles and "submit" them to the article directory. Now here's a very important piece of information about article marketing - are you ready?!They do this because there is a BENEFIT for them… :-)The benefit is that when a website owner takes an article from the article directory and puts it on their site, there are certain conditions that they have to adhere to. One of them is that they must leave a live URL (link) (which points back to the article author's site) in the resource box at the end which acknowledges the article author.So what? you might ask...Well, this important link in the resource box does two things:1. It creates a one-way link back to the article writers website. This has benefits from a search engine optimization (SEO) perspective. The more one-way links back to the authors site the better (generally speaking), for the Search Engine ranking of that site.2. It can create actual traffic to the site. A percentage of people reading the article, will click on this link and land on the authors' site, which may result in a sale, or a click on an Adsense Ad, or a pay-per-lead ad, or a signup in an opt-in box etc.So article marketing is a win-win situation. Actually a win-win-win! The website owner who publishses the article gets f 4. Capacity Issues a. Frequently springing durable powers of attorney for finances and advanced health care directives state that two physicians must certify in writing that the principal is incapacitated. Often it’s difficult to obtain this, since physicians are concerned about liability. b. One alternative is say something like the following: For purposes of this instrument, I shall be deemed "incapacitated" if certified in writing by any two people falling within the following categories: My spouse, if any. Any successor trustee to any revocable trust created by me. Any actual or potential agent specified in this power of attorney. Any actual or potential executor specified in my will. The following named persons: Any licensed physician not related by blood or marriage me nor to any beneficiaries of any trust or will created by me. 5. Unified Federal Gift and Estate Tax Credit a. There is a Unified Credit against federal gift and estate taxes as follows (based on the net estate): Year of Death Unified Credit (net estate) 2002-2003 $1,000,000 2004-2005 $1,500,000 2006-2008 $2,000,000 2009 $3,500,000 2010 Unlimited 2011 $1,000,000 b. Individual retirement accounts are counted as part of the net estate. i. Where an irrevocable trust holds an insurance policy and is specifically prohibited from exercising any power normally conferred on the owner of a policy, the proceeds of the policy are not counted as part of the estate. c. Life insurance proceeds are counted toward the net estate if either i) they are received by the estate or ii) they are received by other beneficiaries and the deceased had any “incidents of ownership” in the policy. d. Note the drop in the Unified Credit between 2010 and 2011. Everyone assumes that Congress will do something about this before 2011, although at the moment some wags refer to 2010 as “throw momma from the train” year. 6. Agreements Between Spouses Regarding the Status of Property a. Sometimes spouses, as part of estate planning, want to confirm in writing that certain property is community property or separate property. b. Such agreements often provide that joint tenancies (which have a right of survivorship) are really community property. This creates a new income tax basis for both halves of the community property on the death of either spouse; joint tenancy assets generally receive a new basis only for the decedent’s one-half share. i. On the other hand, with large estates (in excess of $1.5 million), joint tenancy with right of survivorship may avoid estate taxes since the property does not become part of the deceased’s estate. This, though, has to be weighed against not receiving a new basis for one-half of the property. c. Note that since July 1, 2001, the community interest of a husband and wife may be held as community property with right of survivorship. This provides the best of both worlds. d. As of January 1, 2005, community property law also applies to domestic partners who have registered with the California Secretary of State. i. Registration with counties, cities or employers does not count for this purpose. ii. Those who have already registered do not have to re-register unless one of the pair filed to terminate the registration at some point. iii. The tax benefits of community property, though, will only apply with respect to California taxes, not federal taxes. 7. Reason to Have at Least a Will a. If you do not have at least a will, then California law determines who receives your estate. This may not be what you want to have happen. b. Where someone dies without a will, California will generally distribute the estate as follows: i. If there is a surviving spouse, that spouse receives: (1) All community property. (2) As to the decedent’s separate property (if any): (a) All of it if the decedent did not leave any surviving issue, parent, brother, sister, or issue of a deceased brother or sister. (b) One half if the decedent has only one child or has one deceased child with issue. (c) One half if the decedent leaves no issue but leaves a parent or parents – or leaves their issue or the issue of either of them. (d) One-third if the decedent leaves more than one child, leaves one child and the issue of one or more deceased children, or leaves issue of two or more deceased children. ii. The rest goes first to the decedent’s surviving children or, if any of them are deceased, to the children’s surviving issue. iii. If the decedent has no surviving children or deceased children with surviving issue, the rest goes to: (1) The decedent’s parents, if living. (2) The decedent’s brothers and sisters (or their issue if any of them are deceased). 8. Reasons to Have a Trust a. Normally, unless a trust has been created, an estate must be probated. i. If, though, the gross value of the estate is $100,000 or less (without subtracting any liens, debts, deeds of trust, etc.), there are simple procedures for distributing an estate without using formal probate proceedings. ii. In addition, all property that a surviving spouse is entitled to receive may be handled with simplified procedures. iii. Even in these two cases, probate still may be appropriate, though, if there are strained family relations, complex investments, large or complex claims by creditors, or an interest in a good-sized business. b. There are two problems with probate: i. It often takes 8 to 10 months. (It can take even longer.) During that time, if the family needs money from the estate, a motion has to be brought and a court order obtained. In contrast, with a trust, there is no probate and the beneficiaries receive the money immediately. ii. Probate is expensive. Attorneys’ fees are set as follows and are based on the gross estate, meaning that there is no subtraction for any liens, debts, deeds of trust, etc.: (1) Four percent on the first one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000). (2) Three percent on the next one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000). (3) Two percent on the next eight hundred thousand dollars ($800,000). (4) One percent on the next nine million dollars ($9,000,000). (5) One-half of 1 percent on the next fifteen million dollars ($15,000,000). (6) For all amounts above twenty-five million dollars ($25,000,000), a reasonable amount to be determined by the court. For example, if your estate is a house worth $700,000, then the probate fees for the attorney will be $17,000 ($4,000 + $3,000 + $10,000) – regardless of the size of any loans against the property. iii. The executor of a will is also entitled to statutory fees, although the executor can waive those fees if he/she wishes (and family members often do). c. A trust can also be used for some tax planning. d. A revocable trust can be set up to create, upon the first spouse’s death, a “marital deduction trust” (which is usually either a QTIP Trust or a Life Estate with Power of Appointment Trust) and a “credit shelter trust” (also known as a Remainder Trust, B Trust, or Bypass Trust). The advantage of doing this is that it effectively doubles the Unified Credit. e. Complex estates (basically those where the net value of the estate is at least twice the Unified Credit for spouses and equal to the Unified Credit for singles) may also use various irrevocable trusts, certain charitable gifts, generation-skipping trusts, etc. i. One example is an irrevocable insurance trust, where an irrevocable trust is made the beneficiary of life insurance policies. (1) If insurance is owned by an irrevocable trust, the insured should not serve as trustee. ii. Another example is a charitable remainder trust: donating a highly appreciated piece of real property such as a residence to a charity – and receiving a charitable donation – but retaining the right to remain there for life. 9. Revocable Trust Assets a. For a trust to be effective, most major assets have to be transferred to the trust so that the trust owns them. i. With real estate, this means that a deed has to be prepared transferring title to the trust, and then the deed filed with the County Recorder’s Office. ii. With stock brokerage accounts, the brokerage company’s forms must be completed. Often the signature has to be confirmed (witnessed) by stock broker. iii. With savings accounts, the bank’s forms must be completed. iv. It’s usually more trouble than it’s worth to put cars (unless they are extremely valuable) or day-to-day checking accounts into the trust. v. Personal property (jewelry, furniture, artwork, etc.) can be placed in the trust just by mentioning them correctly in the trust document(s). vi. Title is generally transferred to the trust by designating the owner along the following lines: “John and Mary Smith, Trustees of the 2005 Smith Family Trust”. b. Ownership of retirement accounts (IRA’s, 401(k)’s, Keogh’s) generally should not be transferred to the trust, because doing so will trigger adverse tax consequences. 10. Beneficiary Designations a. Certain items – the proceeds of life insurance policies and survivor rights in retirement accounts – usually are not governed by the provisions of a trust or will, since they are contractual arrangements. Instead, one designates the beneficiaries by completing the forms provided when the life insurance policy is taken out or the retirement account is created. b. Generally, you can change the beneficiaries at any time by filing out the proper forms. i. One exception is with retirement plans. With these, you normally must make your spouse the primary beneficiary unless your spouse signs a written waiver. c. The beneficiaries of a life insurance policy generally receive the proceeds free of federal income tax. As noted previously, though, the amount of the proceeds will count toward the net estate for purposes of the Unified Credit if the insured retained any “incidents of ownership”. d. Basically, the only time married individuals should not name each other as primary beneficiaries on life insurance policies and retirement accounts is when their estates (including individually owned life insurance benefits) exceed the Unified Credit (or twice the Unified Credit, if they have the proper type of trust) and would trigger estate taxes. (As noted before, money that survivors receive from individual retirement accounts counts towards the net estate for purposes of the Unified Credit.) i. An exception is when the surviving spouse – perhaps due to incapacity, ill health or lack of experience in financial matters -- may not have the ability to manage the money. In that case it may be better to designate a trust as the recipient of the life insurance proceeds and survivor benefits of retirement plans. e. While spouses who are designated as beneficiaries of retirement plans are usually eligible for a tax-free transfer to an individual retirement account or another pension plan, non-spouse beneficiaries are not. i. When the retirement funds are not rolled over, there is income tax, since any time money comes out of a retirement account there is tax. ii. On the other hand, retirement plan companies can now spread the retirement plan distributions over the life of the beneficiary – minimizing the income-tax impact. As a result, the tax issue here is much less of a problem than before. Contact your company for details. f. In an Personal Loans: Where To Find Them community interest of a husband and wife may be held as community property with right of survivorship. This provides the best of both worlds.So, you are in need of some cash. Your family members, friends, neighbors, even your golfing buddy are all tapped out. Trouble is, your car payment is due in 3 days and you can’t be late. That Pontiac Solstice sitting in your drive is a great ride, a chick magnet, and more precious to you then food. Okay, a bit of an exaggeration, but you get my point: you need money and you need it now! Personal loans abound and they are one solution to a crisis situation. Is a personal loan right for you? More importantly: exactly what are your options? Read on and I’ll show you the way!Payday Loans: Payday loans have gotten a lot of press over the past few years as they are a great way to secure personal loans quickly and easily. However, fees and interest rates are high so if you aren’t planning to pay it off within a few days you’ll end up paying extra charges.Cash Advances: Credit Cards are another way for you to secure a personal loan. By drawing on your card’s cash advance feature, you can borrow a few hundred to a few thousand dollars without seeing a loan officer. You’ll pay a fee for the privilege and the interest rate on a cash advance is quite high. However, if you can pay the loan off quickly it could be a viable personal loan alternative for you.Equity Loans: If you own a home, your house may have some equity in it. Some lending institutions are so eager to lend money to you that they’ll approve a loan on the spot. Be careful: the rate could be high and you are putting your house on the line. That Pontiac Solstice convertible may not be worth that sort of aggravation!Friends, Family Members: Ah, now for a test of your familial relationships. Ask Mom, Dad, Gramps, Aunt Bea, or Sis for the funds. That cold hard stare back from them probably means “no” but it could mean yes if you whimper. Groveling could help too. Seriously, a family loan could mean a low or zero interest rate for you. Better than the rate the loan shark guy at work wanted to charge you, right?Retirement Funds: More than likely you won’t be able to tap your retirement funds within three days time, but borrowing from your 401(K) can be a wise d. As of January 1, 2005, community property law also applies to domestic partners who have registered with the California Secretary of State. i. Registration with counties, cities or employers does not count for this purpose. ii. Those who have already registered do not have to re-register unless one of the pair filed to terminate the registration at some point. iii. The tax benefits of community property, though, will only apply with respect to California taxes, not federal taxes. 7. Reason to Have at Least a Will a. If you do not have at least a will, then California law determines who receives your estate. This may not be what you want to have happen. b. Where someone dies without a will, California will generally distribute the estate as follows: i. If there is a surviving spouse, that spouse receives: (1) All community property. (2) As to the decedent’s separate property (if any): (a) All of it if the decedent did not leave any surviving issue, parent, brother, sister, or issue of a deceased brother or sister. (b) One half if the decedent has only one child or has one deceased child with issue. (c) One half if the decedent leaves no issue but leaves a parent or parents – or leaves their issue or the issue of either of them. (d) One-third if the decedent leaves more than one child, leaves one child and the issue of one or more deceased children, or leaves issue of two or more deceased children. ii. The rest goes first to the decedent’s surviving children or, if any of them are deceased, to the children’s surviving issue. iii. If the decedent has no surviving children or deceased children with surviving issue, the rest goes to: (1) The decedent’s parents, if living. (2) The decedent’s brothers and sisters (or their issue if any of them are deceased). 8. Reasons to Have a Trust a. Normally, unless a trust has been created, an estate must be probated. i. If, though, the gross value of the estate is $100,000 or less (without subtracting any liens, debts, deeds of trust, etc.), there are simple procedures for distributing an estate without using formal probate proceedings. ii. In addition, all property that a surviving spouse is entitled to receive may be handled with simplified procedures. iii. Even in these two cases, probate still may be appropriate, though, if there are strained family relations, complex investments, large or complex claims by creditors, or an interest in a good-sized business. b. There are two problems with probate: i. It often takes 8 to 10 months. (It can take even longer.) During that time, if the family needs money from the estate, a motion has to be brought and a court order obtained. In contrast, with a trust, there is no probate and the beneficiaries receive the money immediately. ii. Probate is expensive. Attorneys’ fees are set as follows and are based on the gross estate, meaning that there is no subtraction for any liens, debts, deeds of trust, etc.: (1) Four percent on the first one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000). (2) Three percent on the next one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000). (3) Two percent on the next eight hundred thousand dollars ($800,000). (4) One percent on the next nine million dollars ($9,000,000). (5) One-half of 1 percent on the next fifteen million dollars ($15,000,000). (6) For all amounts above twenty-five million dollars ($25,000,000), a reasonable amount to be determined by the court. For example, if your estate is a house worth $700,000, then the probate fees for the attorney will be $17,000 ($4,000 + $3,000 + $10,000) – regardless of the size of any loans against the property. iii. The executor of a will is also entitled to statutory fees, although the executor can waive those fees if he/she wishes (and family members often do). c. A trust can also be used for some tax planning. d. A revocable trust can be set up to create, upon the first spouse’s death, a “marital deduction trust” (which is usually either a QTIP Trust or a Life Estate with Power of Appointment Trust) and a “credit shelter trust” (also known as a Remainder Trust, B Trust, or Bypass Trust). The advantage of doing this is that it effectively doubles the Unified Credit. e. Complex estates (basically those where the net value of the estate is at least twice the Unified Credit for spouses and equal to the Unified Credit for singles) may also use various irrevocable trusts, certain charitable gifts, generation-skipping trusts, etc. i. One example is an irrevocable insurance trust, where an irrevocable trust is made the beneficiary of life insurance policies. (1) If insurance is owned by an irrevocable trust, the insured should not serve as trustee. ii. Another example is a charitable remainder trust: donating a highly appreciated piece of real property such as a residence to a charity – and receiving a charitable donation – but retaining the right to remain there for life. 9. Revocable Trust Assets a. For a trust to be effective, most major assets have to be transferred to the trust so that the trust owns them. i. With real estate, this means that a deed has to be prepared transferring title to the trust, and then the deed filed with the County Recorder’s Office. ii. With stock brokerage accounts, the brokerage company’s forms must be completed. Often the signature has to be confirmed (witnessed) by stock broker. iii. With savings accounts, the bank’s forms must be completed. iv. It’s usually more trouble than it’s worth to put cars (unless they are extremely valuable) or day-to-day checking accounts into the trust. v. Personal property (jewelry, furniture, artwork, etc.) can be placed in the trust just by mentioning them correctly in the trust document(s). vi. Title is generally transferred to the trust by designating the owner along the following lines: “John and Mary Smith, Trustees of the 2005 Smith Family Trust”. b. Ownership of retirement accounts (IRA’s, 401(k)’s, Keogh’s) generally should not be transferred to the trust, because doing so will trigger adverse tax consequences. 10. Beneficiary Designations a. Certain items – the proceeds of life insurance policies and survivor rights in retirement accounts – usually are not governed by the provisions of a trust or will, since they are contractual arrangements. Instead, one designates the beneficiaries by completing the forms provided when the life insurance policy is taken out or the retirement account is created. b. Generally, you can change the beneficiaries at any time by filing out the proper forms. i. One exception is with retirement plans. With these, you normally must make your spouse the primary beneficiary unless your spouse signs a written waiver. c. The beneficiaries of a life insurance policy generally receive the proceeds free of federal income tax. As noted previously, though, the amount of the proceeds will count toward the net estate for purposes of the Unified Credit if the insured retained any “incidents of ownership”. d. Basically, the only time married individuals should not name each other as primary beneficiaries on life insurance policies and retirement accounts is when their estates (including individually owned life insurance benefits) exceed the Unified Credit (or twice the Unified Credit, if they have the proper type of trust) and would trigger estate taxes. (As noted before, money that survivors receive from individual retirement accounts counts towards the net estate for purposes of the Unified Credit.) i. An exception is when the surviving spouse – perhaps due to incapacity, ill health or lack of experience in financial matters -- may not have the ability to manage the money. In that case it may be better to designate a trust as the recipient of the life insurance proceeds and survivor benefits of retirement plans. e. While spouses who are designated as beneficiaries of retirement plans are usually eligible for a tax-free transfer to an individual retirement account or another pension plan, non-spouse beneficiaries are not. i. When the retirement funds are not rolled over, there is income tax, since any time money comes out of a retirement account there is tax. ii. On the other hand, retirement plan companies can now spread the retirement plan distributions over the life of the beneficiary – minimizing the income-tax impact. As a result, the tax issue here is much less of a problem than before. Contact your company for details. f. In an Writing Effective Ad Copy For Your Web Pages a trust, there is no probate and the beneficiaries receive the money immediately.Give information – In contrast th the empty hype which we find in many mass-media commercials, website are expected to provide information. Design your website for the visitors you are looking to attract.Solve a problem, satisfy a “want” - There is a difference between “features” and “benefits”. Features are facts regarding a service or product. Benefits are the way in which those features will directly improve people's lives. Examples: saving time, saving money, improving appearance. Note: You must be very descriptive in naming the benefits to be effective. How many times have you seen an ad boasting 'Save time and Money!”. People ignore it nowadays because it's too general and commonplace.Focus on your customer, not on yourself – Customers want their problems solved. They want a direct path to the pages where they can find answers. They don't care about company's history, goals, awards..etc.Appeal to emotions and feelings – Provide information that addresses people's emotions, e.g., the fear of financial loss, the excitement of making money.Use words that attract attention – Free, You, Discover, Easy, Guaranteed, Proven, Safe, Secret. Research other term that have proven to be effective.Interact with your visitors – Your website can provide many opportunities for interaction: give away material, newsletters, discussion boards, chat rooms. These types of things allow for a personal service with customer service and increased sales.Emphasize you Uniques Selling Point – What separates you from the competition? What specific qualities(that benefit the customer) set you apart?Avoid hard-sell techniques – Especially on the internet, people don't want to be manipulated or pushed, it's very easy to go somewhere else. Instead, design your site so it easy for visitors to navigate and leads them to a logical conclusion and a course of action for them to take.Remember AIDA:Attention – Grab the person attention.Interest – Stimulate the person's interest in your product or service.Desire – Trigger the person's desire for your product or s ii. Probate is expensive. Attorneys’ fees are set as follows and are based on the gross estate, meaning that there is no subtraction for any liens, debts, deeds of trust, etc.: (1) Four percent on the first one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000). (2) Three percent on the next one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000). (3) Two percent on the next eight hundred thousand dollars ($800,000). (4) One percent on the next nine million dollars ($9,000,000). (5) One-half of 1 percent on the next fifteen million dollars ($15,000,000). (6) For all amounts above twenty-five million dollars ($25,000,000), a reasonable amount to be determined by the court. For example, if your estate is a house worth $700,000, then the probate fees for the attorney will be $17,000 ($4,000 + $3,000 + $10,000) – regardless of the size of any loans against the property. iii. The executor of a will is also entitled to statutory fees, although the executor can waive those fees if he/she wishes (and family members often do). c. A trust can also be used for some tax planning. d. A revocable trust can be set up to create, upon the first spouse’s death, a “marital deduction trust” (which is usually either a QTIP Trust or a Life Estate with Power of Appointment Trust) and a “credit shelter trust” (also known as a Remainder Trust, B Trust, or Bypass Trust). The advantage of doing this is that it effectively doubles the Unified Credit. e. Complex estates (basically those where the net value of the estate is at least twice the Unified Credit for spouses and equal to the Unified Credit for singles) may also use various irrevocable trusts, certain charitable gifts, generation-skipping trusts, etc. i. One example is an irrevocable insurance trust, where an irrevocable trust is made the beneficiary of life insurance policies. (1) If insurance is owned by an irrevocable trust, the insured should not serve as trustee. ii. Another example is a charitable remainder trust: donating a highly appreciated piece of real property such as a residence to a charity – and receiving a charitable donation – but retaining the right to remain there for life. 9. Revocable Trust Assets a. For a trust to be effective, most major assets have to be transferred to the trust so that the trust owns them. i. With real estate, this means that a deed has to be prepared transferring title to the trust, and then the deed filed with the County Recorder’s Office. ii. With stock brokerage accounts, the brokerage company’s forms must be completed. Often the signature has to be confirmed (witnessed) by stock broker. iii. With savings accounts, the bank’s forms must be completed. iv. It’s usually more trouble than it’s worth to put cars (unless they are extremely valuable) or day-to-day checking accounts into the trust. v. Personal property (jewelry, furniture, artwork, etc.) can be placed in the trust just by mentioning them correctly in the trust document(s). vi. Title is generally transferred to the trust by designating the owner along the following lines: “John and Mary Smith, Trustees of the 2005 Smith Family Trust”. b. Ownership of retirement accounts (IRA’s, 401(k)’s, Keogh’s) generally should not be transferred to the trust, because doing so will trigger adverse tax consequences. 10. Beneficiary Designations a. Certain items – the proceeds of life insurance policies and survivor rights in retirement accounts – usually are not governed by the provisions of a trust or will, since they are contractual arrangements. Instead, one designates the beneficiaries by completing the forms provided when the life insurance policy is taken out or the retirement account is created. b. Generally, you can change the beneficiaries at any time by filing out the proper forms. i. One exception is with retirement plans. With these, you normally must make your spouse the primary beneficiary unless your spouse signs a written waiver. c. The beneficiaries of a life insurance policy generally receive the proceeds free of federal income tax. As noted previously, though, the amount of the proceeds will count toward the net estate for purposes of the Unified Credit if the insured retained any “incidents of ownership”. d. Basically, the only time married individuals should not name each other as primary beneficiaries on life insurance policies and retirement accounts is when their estates (including individually owned life insurance benefits) exceed the Unified Credit (or twice the Unified Credit, if they have the proper type of trust) and would trigger estate taxes. (As noted before, money that survivors receive from individual retirement accounts counts towards the net estate for purposes of the Unified Credit.) i. An exception is when the surviving spouse – perhaps due to incapacity, ill health or lack of experience in financial matters -- may not have the ability to manage the money. In that case it may be better to designate a trust as the recipient of the life insurance proceeds and survivor benefits of retirement plans. e. While spouses who are designated as beneficiaries of retirement plans are usually eligible for a tax-free transfer to an individual retirement account or another pension plan, non-spouse beneficiaries are not. i. When the retirement funds are not rolled over, there is income tax, since any time money comes out of a retirement account there is tax. ii. On the other hand, retirement plan companies can now spread the retirement plan distributions over the life of the beneficiary – minimizing the income-tax impact. As a result, the tax issue here is much less of a problem than before. Contact your company for details. f. In an Understand Backlinks from Search Engines ccounts into the trust.Most Search Engine Optimizers understand the importance of the backlinks in order for a website to succeed. Most search engines take into account of the backlinks quality for their ranking algorithm. We will cover the top three search engines (Google, Yahoo and MSN) here and discuss how they treat backlinks from their point of view.The most popular search engine, Google, places great emphasis on backlinks. In fact, relevant backlinks is all a website needs to achieve a high ranking in Google result page. Google, however, does not shows all the indexed backlinks when user queries with the link: operator. In addition, Google does not update their backlink index as frequent as their search results.It is believed that multiple backlinks from a same domain does not have the stack effect in Google. For example, links from forum signatures and directories will have minimum weigh in Google's ranking algorithm.Yahoo, on the other hand, chooses to display all the backlinks to the users. A search with the link: operator often reveals most of a page's backlinks to screen. Although they display most of the backlinks, it does not mean that they value them as much as in Google. Unfortunately, backlinks are not as important as they are in Yahoo than in Google.Yahoo has introduced a site explorer interface to aid the webmasters in locating the backlinks and other useful information. Yahoo also provides one of the best API for the web masters' usage.MSN also offers to display all the backlinks to the user with the link: operator query. The backlinks update in MSN also seems to be the most updated among all the three search engines. It may seems that MSN focus a lot on backlinks but this is usually not the case. Backlinks are not as important as keyword domain in MSN's point of view.In conclusion, Google is the only search engine that put a lot of focus on backlinks in their ranking formula and since they are the most popular search engine, backlinks are important for every website. It is recommended to use Yahoo or MSN to check for backlinks because they show a more complete listing. v. Personal property (jewelry, furniture, artwork, etc.) can be placed in the trust just by mentioning them correctly in the trust document(s). vi. Title is generally transferred to the trust by designating the owner along the following lines: “John and Mary Smith, Trustees of the 2005 Smith Family Trust”. b. Ownership of retirement accounts (IRA’s, 401(k)’s, Keogh’s) generally should not be transferred to the trust, because doing so will trigger adverse tax consequences. 10. Beneficiary Designations a. Certain items – the proceeds of life insurance policies and survivor rights in retirement accounts – usually are not governed by the provisions of a trust or will, since they are contractual arrangements. Instead, one designates the beneficiaries by completing the forms provided when the life insurance policy is taken out or the retirement account is created. b. Generally, you can change the beneficiaries at any time by filing out the proper forms. i. One exception is with retirement plans. With these, you normally must make your spouse the primary beneficiary unless your spouse signs a written waiver. c. The beneficiaries of a life insurance policy generally receive the proceeds free of federal income tax. As noted previously, though, the amount of the proceeds will count toward the net estate for purposes of the Unified Credit if the insured retained any “incidents of ownership”. d. Basically, the only time married individuals should not name each other as primary beneficiaries on life insurance policies and retirement accounts is when their estates (including individually owned life insurance benefits) exceed the Unified Credit (or twice the Unified Credit, if they have the proper type of trust) and would trigger estate taxes. (As noted before, money that survivors receive from individual retirement accounts counts towards the net estate for purposes of the Unified Credit.) i. An exception is when the surviving spouse – perhaps due to incapacity, ill health or lack of experience in financial matters -- may not have the ability to manage the money. In that case it may be better to designate a trust as the recipient of the life insurance proceeds and survivor benefits of retirement plans. e. While spouses who are designated as beneficiaries of retirement plans are usually eligible for a tax-free transfer to an individual retirement account or another pension plan, non-spouse beneficiaries are not. i. When the retirement funds are not rolled over, there is income tax, since any time money comes out of a retirement account there is tax. ii. On the other hand, retirement plan companies can now spread the retirement plan distributions over the life of the beneficiary – minimizing the income-tax impact. As a result, the tax issue here is much less of a problem than before. Contact your company for details. f. In any case, contingent, secondary beneficiaries should be named. Otherwise the money may wind up being distributed according to the terms of the trust or will. i. Naming minor children as beneficiaries may be a problem, since the money would likely have to be held by a court-appointed guardian. To avoid this, a trust for minors can be named as a contingent beneficiary. ii. Another problem is that if you simply name your children as beneficiaries and one predeceases you, that child’s children will not receive any money. Again, having a trust named as a contingent beneficiary can avoid this problem. 11. Family Limited Partnerships and Family LLC’s a. A family limited partnership or a family LLC is simply a limited partnership or LLC where all the owners are family members. b. A transfer of ownership to a child in excess of the $11,000 per person annual gift exclusion will reduce a parent’s lifetime gift tax exemption (currently $1.5 million) that is permitted under federal estate tax laws. As a result, the value of the ownership transferred to a child is often discounted from a proportional share of the fair market value to get under the $11,000 limit. c. There are at least two reasons to justify the discounted value: i. There is a substantial value in being able to control a business, and the ownership transferred at any one time is relatively small. ii. Because there generally is no public market for the interests in the business, it is often difficult to sell the interests later. d. Discounts frequently range from 10% to 50%. e. It is crucial that these types of discounts be documented by a supportable appraisal, in case the IRS challenges the discounted values. 12. How Often Should You Update Your Estate Documents? a. Basically, you should consider updating your estate documents when major life events occur: i. The births of a baby whom you want to make a beneficiary. ii. The death of a beneficiary, agent, executor or successor trustee. iii. Divorce. iv. A major asset being added or transferred. b. In addition, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (“HIPAA”) has imposed stringent privacy restrictions regarding medical records. As a result, if your advanced health care directive (or durable power of attorney for health care) does not address the HIPAA requirements, you may want to have it updated. The foregoing article constitutes general information only and should not be relied upon as legal advice.
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