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Estate Planning Special Trusts - Medi-Cal - Trust Alternatives

Estate Planning Special Trusts - Medi-Cal - Trust Alternatives. James A. Busse Jr., Attorney Estate Planning, Probate California SBN 225244 Nevada SBN 8388 (562) 490-4905 (562) 981-0667 [FAX] (562) 673 7969 [Mobile]. Those who will die and want to direct their estate after death.

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Estate Planning Special Trusts - Medi-Cal - Trust Alternatives

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  1. Estate PlanningSpecial Trusts - Medi-Cal - Trust Alternatives James A. Busse Jr., Attorney Estate Planning, Probate California SBN 225244 Nevada SBN 8388 (562) 490-4905 (562) 981-0667 [FAX] (562) 673 7969 [Mobile]

  2. Those who will die and want to direct their estate after death. Natural Death Accidental Death Other Certainty of estate distribution Tax Savings for beneficiaries Tax Savings for estate Business Continuation Asset retention Protect certain assets from Medical / Nursing home Estate Planning – Who Needs it? The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  3. Terms • Testator / Testatrix One who makes a will • Settlor – One who creates a Trust • Trustee – One who controls the Trust • Beneficiary / Devisee / Legatee – One who benefits from the Trust or Will • Executor – One who is the Personal Representative for a deceased person who dies with a Will This person distributes the assets according to the terms of the Will and the orders of the Court. • Administrator – A court appointed “Executor” for a person that dies without a will. • Revocable Inter Vivos Trust (RIVT) • An Estate Planning Device created during the life of the settlor that owns the Settlor’s assets for the benefit of the Beneficiaries. The Trustees control the trust Assets according to the terms of the trust. • Initially the Settlor is the Trustee and the Beneficiary of the trust. • Special Needs Trust – A trust that provides only for special needs of a disabled or Aged person usually receiving Medicaid or Medi-Cal. The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  4. Will Procedure 6-12 months The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  5. Trusts • Simple RIVT Named successor trustee The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  6. Trusts • Credit Shelter Trust Named successor trustee Up to exclusion amt. The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  7. Trusts • Disclaimer Trust Named successor trustee Survivor may disclaim all or part within a fixed period of time D The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  8. Will • All Wills are individual • Married couple has two Wills • If person dies with no Will [intestate], Assets are distributed according to law, Cal Prob. Code 6401-6410 and 240. • Probate fees are set by law • 10800. (a) Subject to the provisions of this part, for ordinary services the personal representative shall receive compensation based on the value of the estate accounted for by the personal representative, as follows: (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 one 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. (b) For the purposes of this section, the value of the estate accounted for by the personal representative is the total amount of the appraisal value of property in the inventory, plus gains over the appraisal value on sales, plus receipts, less losses from the appraisal value on sales, without reference to encumbrances or other obligations on estate property. • Property owned in other State must be probated in that State. • A Will does not survive marriage or divorce. {Still good until divorce is final} • A Will requires Probate to distribute assets with gross value over $100,000 in California, Other states have different limits. (NV is >$20K) The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  9. RIVT Trust • 1- n trusts for Married couple are allowed. • Trusts direct assets much like a Will (my Ford Truck to my son Joe…etc.) • Married RIVT Has many options when first Settlor Dies • Separate and ½ Community Property may be controlled in blended families via Credit Shelter or QTIP trusts. • Credit Shelter Trust protects the unified Credit for each Taxpayer. (Currently $1.5M each) • QTIP trust protects Spouses first children from surviving Spouse. • Surviving Spouse may not freely use assets. • Disclaimer Trust allows surviving spouse to select trust progression according to future expectations and tax changes. • Is good in all states and many countries. • Trust survives marriage or divorce The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  10. Will Probate (costs set by law) 120 day claim period Court supervision Public Inexpensive to establish & maintain ($200 - $1000) Expensive to Probate Probate required in each State where real property is owned Trust No probate (if done correctly) 1-year claim period No court supervision Private More Expensive to establish and maintain ($500 - $5000) Good in every state Requires Pour-over Will to catch I-forgots’. Will v. Trust The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  11. Checklist to Determine if Estate Planning is Needed • ___ Over one year since Estate Plan has been reviewed? • ___ Are you uncertain what will happen to your assets if you or your spouse (or both) died today? • ___ Do you have separate assets? • ___ Have you been recently married or separated? • ___ Do you have minor children? Who provides for them? With what assets? For how long? • ___ How will accounts for working Capital be released to continue the operation of your business if you and your partner were to die today? • ___ If you became incapacitated, would your family have to go through court proceedings to carry on your affairs? • ___ Do you have children not from your current marriage? • ___ Could your business cause liability due to contract or an accident? • ___ Is anyone other than your current spouse listed as a beneficiary on your life insurance? • ___ Would you like to avoid Probate? • ___ Does the TOTAL value of all you and your spouses assets (House, life Insurance, cash, investments, EVERYTHING) exceed $1.5 Million. • ___ Do you plan to gift any property at your death? • ___ Will assets have to be sold to pay expenses at your death? • ___ Are any members of your family unsure about their economic future in a family business? • ___ Do you own any property that has appreciated significantly since you bought it? • ___ Would nursing Home expenses (currently about $4,800 -$7,000 per month) create a hardship for your family? The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  12. MEDI-CAL CONSIDERATIONS (1) • Most couples have a standard A-B, (Credit Shelter Trust) • Distributes income to Settlors during their lifetimes and allows for invasion of principal. Trust is revocable • Provides that Trustee pay for the benefit of the disabled settlor income and principal • Divides assets on death of first Settlor into two trusts. • Pays survivor income from Credit Shelter Trust (with rights of invasion of Principal) and income and principal from Survivor’s trust. • On death of Surviving Spouse both Credit Shelter and Survivor’s trust distribute to Beneficiaries. The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  13. MEDI-CAL CONSIDERATIONS (2) • Three objectives of Medicaid / Medi-Cal Planning • Eligibility • Share the Cost • Recovery Avoidance The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  14. MEDI-CAL CONSIDERATIONS (3) • Access to assets causes Eligibility and Recovery Problems • Institutional spouse can not have access to more than $2000 in non exempt assets. • Many assets are exempt, such as the family home, up to about $100,000 in cash, and the Family Car. • Non exempt assets are mutual funds, 401(k) etc. Basically cash or convertible assets. • Home retained in institutionalized spouses name is available for recovery. The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  15. MEDI-CAL CONSIDERATIONS (4) • Access to Income creates a share the cost Problem • If income distribution is mandatory then that income is available for cost sharing. • If income distribution is optional it may not be available for distribution The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  16. MEDI-CAL CONSIDERATIONS (5) • Division of Trust at Death of First Spouse can cause Eligibility, Share the Cost and Recovery Problems • If institutionalized spouse dies first only recovery problems are left. • What if the Well Spouse dies first? • Institutionalized spouse gets his Surviving Spouse Share, and becomes a beneficiary with the ability to invade Credit Shelter Trust for Needs. i.e., Most everything is now available to the State. The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  17. MEDI-CAL CONSIDERATIONS (6) • Options: • Prepare Related Documents in advance of any known illness • Client Specific • Use Power of Appointment conforming to IRC 2041 • Complete Trust Will POA coordination required. • Dealing with a Known Illness • Must deal with Client’s Specific Situation. (age, type of illness, recovery options, economic situation, etc.) The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  18. MEDI-CAL CONSIDERATIONS (7) • Options: • Modify Trust Distribution on Death of First Spouse. • Difficult to do because the Basic A-B Trust creates a Trust. If the assets of the created trust are not available for distribution (irrevocable Trust No distribution) then there is a 30 or 60 month “look back” period that disqualifies the institutionalized spouse. All income go toward Cost Sharing • If Credit Shelter trust has provisions for use of funds on some ascertainable standard, then ALL Principal is available. • Basic Strategy is to treat the institutionalized spouse as already dead. The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  19. MEDI-CAL CONSIDERATIONS (8) • Options: • Provide for Special Needs. • Cutting the ill Spouse out of the distributive process may not be necessary. • Complex interrelated Will-Trust Scheme that distributes Trust Principal through the Will. Requires Probate and Contingent Clauses in each Will, Power of Attorney, and Trust. Makes Trust Principal unavailable but requires Probate. However Probates of this type are often not expensive or complex. The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  20. D4A (Payback) Trust • Special needs trust governed by OBRA-93 and 22 CFR 50489.9. SSI Trust rules also apply. • Funded with assets belonging to beneficiary • By Statute, established by parent, grandparent, guardian or court • Must pay back for all assistance received up to full amount of trust at death of beneficiary • Beneficiary must be under 65 at time trust is established. The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  21. Litigation Special Needs Trust • Designed to hold the proceeds of a judgement for minor or person with a disability who receives proceeds. Cal Probate Code 3600 et seq. • Subject to review by State before approval by court • Trustee required to notify State and payment of any claims state may make. (Must tell the state the total value of the trust then let them decide how much to take) • Restrictions on how much can be placed in trust; Rules 7-903 The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

  22. Summary • With Medi-Cal belt tightening, The standard family where Mom and Dad moved here in the 50’s or 60’s, worked in aerospace or some other large industry, bought a home and maybe some vacation property, amassed large retirement benefits and IRA’s and 401(k) funds, will have their estate seriously eroded if a spouse has to be institutionalized in a Nursing Home costing $5,000 - $7,000 per month and increasing if proper Estate planning is not accomplished. • Standard fill in the blank Estate plans do not and can not cover every situation. • Alzheimer’s patients live a long time. Often the survive their family members. • Methods exist to work with the system to ensure eligibility, reduce cost sharing, and limit Recovery Today. • Laws Change – What worked yesterday will probably not work today. What works today may not work tomorrow. The Law Offices of James A. Busse Jr.

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