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Can I keep control and still protect my assets?. Justine Markovitz and Jay Rubinstein Withers LLP. Overview. Threats to family wealth Divorce Forced heirship Regulatory aspects Preserving family wealth Will Joint accounts Foundations Corporate structures Trust structures.
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Can I keep control and still protect my assets? Justine Markovitz and Jay Rubinstein Withers LLP
Overview • Threats to family wealth • Divorce • Forced heirship • Regulatory aspects • Preserving family wealth • Will • Joint accounts • Foundations • Corporate structures • Trust structures
Threats to family wealth - Divorce • Why is this important? • In many countries, at least 4 in 10 marriages end in divorce • Divorce can be very expensive • Often no concept of separate property • More applications to join trustees • Assets available for division maximise
Threats to family wealth - Divorce • Recent case law – the English Court’s new approach • White v White (2000) – yardstick of equality. ‘Reasonable requirements’ held to be discriminatory to homemakers (usually women) • Cowan v Cowan (2001) – departure from 50% justified on the basis of husband’s exceptional contribution. Wife received 38% • Lambert v Lambert (2002) – wife awarded 50%. Marriage of 23 years • Miller v Miller (2006) – short marriage, no children. Wife awarded £5m upheld by House of Lords • Charman v Charman (2008) – family trust established by husband. Trust treated as resource of husband. Wife awarded £48 million.
Threats to family wealth - Forced Heirship • Testamentary freedom vs ‘reserved portions’ • Conflict of laws • Clawback feature
Threats to family wealth - Regulation? • Licensing requirement • Required level of third party involvement • Increasing amounts of disclosure
Keeping wealth in the family • Will • Joint accounts • Foundations • Corporate structures • Private trust company (PTC) • Trust structures
Will • Advantages • Full control during lifetime • Control over who benefits • Control over who administers • But • Forced heirship • Marital regimes • Tax
Joint accounts • Advantages • Full control during lifetime • Control over who benefits during life and on death • Avoid probate • But • Forced heirship • Marital regimes • Tax
Foundations • What are they? • Where are they? • Civil law jurisdictions • Evolving in common law jurisdictions • Founder’s purpose • Control • Privacy • Tax treatment?
Corporate structures • Advantages • Control during lifetime • Control over who benefits during life and on death • Restrict probate • But • Forced heirship • Marital regimes • Tax • Corporate restrictions
Trust structures • Tax planning • To protect assets from … • Creditors • Disinherited heirs • Financially unsophisticated heirs • Ex-spouses • Minimise impact of forced heirship rules?
Private Trust Company (PTC) • What is a PTC? • A company limited by shares created to act as a trustee of a specific trust or trusts • Advantages • Legal personality • Customisation • Privacy • Flexible ownership of shares (e.g. purpose trust) • Settlor/beneficiaries as directors
Choice of trustee – Private Trust Company – merits / issues • Tailor structure to family needs • Combine input of professional trustee, family members and key advisers • Control of information • Continuity • Location • Formalities • Limitation of liability
Trustee of purpose trust appoints directors of PTC Purpose Trust Protector has power to hire and fire trustees Private Trust Company Directors of PTC exercise trustee powers Protector has power to hire and fire trustees and block key decisions Private trust company (PTC) Family Trust
Exercises overall control • Selects institutional trustee and therefore controls directors of PTC • Appoints protector of trusts Appointor Trustee of appoints Purpose Trust Enforcer • Consents to key decisions of trusts • Appointment of trustees • Distributions of and/or income capital Protector Owns Private Trust Company Manage Directors Supports administration Trustee of Family Trust 3 Family Trust 2 Family Trust 1 Trust company (as service provider) Holding Company Holding Company Holding Company Assets Assets Assets Trustee (Institution)
What about a US State as an APT orPTC jurisdiction? • Must look to individual state law • Complexity of regulations of PTCs • Requirements of local activity • Costs • Trust perpetuities period • Statute of limitations on claims • “Directed trusts”
Conclusion • Too much control is dangerous • Planning is essential • Identify the issues involved and understand family dynamics • Identify the appropriate solution • Identify the pitfalls and problems • Establish the structure • Monitor the structure
Getting in touch Jay Rubinstein Partner Withers LLP 63 rue du Rhône CH-1204 Geneva Switzerland Direct telephone: +41 (0)22 593 7704 Fax: +41 (0)22 593 7778 Mobile phone: +41 (0)79 210 3928 Email: jay.rubinstein@withersworldwide.com Justine Markovitz Geneva Office Managing Partner Withers LLP 63 rue du Rhône CH-1204 Geneva Switzerland Direct telephone: +41 (0)22 593 7711 Fax: +41 (0)22 593 7778 Mobile phone: +41 (0)79 590 8665 Email: justine.markovitz@withersworldwide.com
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