Having a WILL is not the end-all.  I hear all the time that “I need a WILL”.  Yes, in most cases, that is true.  However, much of what you own may fall outside your WILL.  In other words, many of the assets you have right now are not controlled by the existence of a WILL.  These assets will be distributed to heirs as provided through other means including a DEED or BENEFICIARY DESIGNATION.

Here is a list of 5 common assets generally not controlled by your WILL:

1. Jointly-Owned Real Estate

2. Life Insurance

3. 401Ks, IRAs, Retirement Accounts

4. Jointly-Owned Businesses

5. Investment Accounts

Most people own any or all of the above.  Estate Planning is a lot more than just cranking out a WILL and calling it a day.  A good estate planning attorney helps you strategize your whole estate including assets/property not distributed by a WILL and making sur that it all makes sense to you.

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If you have outdated beneficiary designations, remember that your WILL does not supercede the beneficiary designations.  For example, if you provide in your WILL that your nephew Jimmy Johnson is to receive everything BUT the beneficiary on your $300,000 IRA is your uncle Jerry Jones, under law, your uncle Jerry Jones has the right to receive that $300,000 when you pass away – even if that is not at all what you wanted!

Beneficiary Designation > Will

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Avoiding Probate in Minnesota

Each state has its own ways to avoid probate.  In general, most people want to avoid probate because they have specific goals with how and who receives their inheritance.  Probate avoidance is not the end all.  BUT most people don’t realize that there are EASY ways to reclassify your assets from PROBATE to NONPROBATE.

Remember our rule of thumb: everything you own in life is either labeled as PROBATE or NONPROBATE.  If you can move everything to the NONPROBATE side, your estate in all likelihood will avoid probate.  Your heirs and relatives will probably thank you for it!

Here are 6 easy ways to move assets from PROBATE to NONPROBATE:

1. Joint Ownership

In MN, you can move real estate or certain investment accounts into joint ownership.  This means that the surviving joint account holder or joint tenant is entitled to automatically receive your share of the asset.

2. Transfer on Death Deed – TODD

MN allows you to create beneficiary designations for your real estate.  There is a specific but simple process you must follow.  However, if you do it right, you can make it easy to move real estate to your heirs after you die.

3. Gifting

A lifetime gifting strategy allows you to start reducing the probate assets you might own.

4. Living or Revocable Trust

Every week, someone asks me about a trust.  A trust is an excellent tool to retitle probate assets and have them placed into a trust managed by a trustee of your choosing.

5. Insurance

Yes, insurance is a great way to pass an inheritance to heirs.  As long as you have valid beneficiary designations on the life insurance policy, you are good to go!

6. Beneficiary Designations and Payable on Death Designations

If you own bank accounts, investment accounts, 401Ks, IRAs, simply make sure that your beneficiary designations are current and up-to-date.  So many times people don’t check these and if the beneficiary is already deceased or there is none, then that item will be labeled as PROBATE.

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How to Avoid Probate

As an estate planning attorney, one of the most common questions I receive is: “What can I do to avoid probate?”  Most people know that probate is a process that assists the transfer of assets and property from the person who died to his or her heirs.  Most people don’t realize however that probate is entirely unnecessary with a little simple planning.

First, remember this rule: ALL ASSETS AND PROPERTY YOU OWN DURING YOUR LIFETIME ARE CLASSIFIED AS EITHER “PROBATE” OR “NONPROBATE”.  Everything from life insurance to the house you own is either one or the other!

If you want to have your estate avoid probate, then it is recommended that you move each of your assets and property from being labeled as PROBATE over to NONPROBATE.  Avoiding probate allows your heirs to access their inheritance much quicker and substantially reduces the likelihood that your estate will be tied up in court.

My experience is that most people don’t know that probate avoidance is available to everyone.  It doesn’t matter what you own or how much or how little you own.  Understanding what tools are available to you is the key to setting up your estate to avoid probate.  In my next blog post, I will provide tips on how to arrange your assets and property outside of probate by reclassifying them as NONPROBATE.

Luke Enno is an estate planning attorney at Enno Law in Maple Grove, MN.

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What’s an “ESTATE”?

What’s an “ESTATE”?

What does “ESTATE” mean?

Do I have an “ESTATE”?

As an estate planning attorney, it is surprising to me how many people ask me what an “estate” is.  There is a misconception that an “estate” is something for the very wealthy like millionaires or billionaires or that an “estate” means that you own real estate.

In the simplest terms, your “estate” is EVERYTHING you own.  Now if you don’t own anything, then you don’t have an estate.  If you own something, then you do have an estate.  99.99% of people have an estate.

So even the poorest homeless man has an estate even if it is just a dollar to his name and a bottle of whiskey in his hand.

It naturally follows that “estate planning” is the process that anyone with an estate does to transfer their assets and property to the person of their choosing.  Without an estate plan, the alternative is to rely on the default statutes under the law which, in many cases, differ substantially from the wishes of the person who died.

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Under Minnesota law, the transfer of the real estate with a TODD becomes effective only after the death of the real estate owner.  In other words, if your mother Doris has a TODD prepared and filed today designating her home to you, the transfer of her home to you does not happen until after your mother Doris passes away.  This is assuming that your mother Doris still owns her home at the time she dies and that she has not otherwise revoked the TODD. 

For your mother Doris, it is important to note that she can still sell the home at any time regardless of the existence of the TODD.  She should also know that she can revoke the TODD at any time as long as she files a TODD revocation form with the County to cancel the TODD she prepared.

For more information, see Minn. Stat. § 507.071.

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No.  The beneficiary named in your TODD has no rights to your real estate whatsoever during your lifetime.  The beneficiary cannot transfer, mortgage or pledge an interest in your real estate as long as you are alive. 

Any attempt by the beneficiary to use your real estate as collateral is illegal as well.  Why?  Because the beneficiary has no rights until after you pass away.  You still could sell the real estate during your lifetime.  You still could revoke the TODD during your lifetime.  You still could designate a different or additional beneficiary to your TODD during your lifetime.  You maintain complete control over the beneficiaries!

For more information, see Minn. Stat. § 507.071.

By the way, when will the Cubs finally win the World Series?  I’m thinking about 2058.  Just another 5 decades or so!

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If you decide to revoke your TODD, you must file and record the TODD revocation document before you die.  In other words, if you have the TODD revocation document prepared while you are alive but rather than file it with the County, you decide to hold onto it in your safe, it is as though the document was never prepared.  Why?  Because it must be filed and recorded before you die to be valid.  After you pass away, it is illegal for your next-of-kin to then file a TODD you signed while you were still alive.

For more information, see Minn. Stat. § 507.071.

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Yes, as long as you are still alive (and competent).  You can revoke or change your TODD whenever you wish.  In our illustration above, we see how one former beneficiary has been locked out from his inheritance!  There will be no entry for Michael at these gates.

Let’s say you prepared and filed a TODD naming your two children, Michael and Homer, as beneficiaries of your home.  Two years from now, you decide that you would prefer to give your home to your new wife, Matilda, when you pass away.  You can file a document with the County to revoke the TODD and there is nothing your children Michael or Homer can do to prevent it. 

In the alternative, you can file a new TODD naming your new wife Matilda as beneficiary.  That new TODD naming Matilda will trump the earlier TODD naming your children as beneficiaries of your home.

The best method to handle a situation like this is to file a document with the County revoking the TODD naming your two children as beneficiaries.  Then after that document is filed, submit a new TODD naming your new wife as beneficiary.  That way, you reduce any potential confusion regarding your true intentions.

Note: a revocation of the TODD must be recorded with the County prior to your death if you are wishing to have the original beneficiaries removed but not replaced. 

For more information, see Minn. Stat. § 507.071.

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In the world of estate planning law, there has been much buzz in recent months regarding what the estate tax threshold will become.  There has been much debate in Congress regarding what amount will be subject to estate taxes at rates of around 45%.  To demonstrate the issue, here is a standard situation.

Let’s assume you are single.

Here are your assets and debts:

Home: $200,000

401K: $40,000

IRA: $60,000

Life Insurance Policy for the benefit of your son: $1,000,000

Mortgage on your home: ($100,000)

For calculating estate taxes, your net worth is $1,200,000.

If the estate tax threshold settles in at $1,000,000 starting in 2011, $200,000 of your estate is subject to state and federal estate tax.  The bite out of that could be as much as $100,000 back to the government.  When you factor in the value of life insurance, it isn’t hard to reach the $1,000,000 threshold in many cases.  For a single person, there are a number of strategies to reduce this potential estat tax effect.  For a couple, likewise, there are additional options as well.

I would strongly recommend reading this article in the USA Today to learn more.  It has some very interesting information about where estate taxes might be headed.

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