Taxing Matters
Overtaxed Member
Again, depending on the particular person's goals and the applicable state law there may be other estate planning tools that do the job at least as well as a trust if not better. I don't (as a lot of those trust seminar people do) push any one estate planning method as being superior to every other estate planning device in every circumstance. Trusts have their place and I recommend them when they suit the client's goals and circumstances. But I look at ALL the various tools available and evaluate them in light of the client's needs and recommend the ones that I believe will best suit the client. Any estate planning lawyer who exclusively recommends only one estate planning device and does not look at everything does his/her client a disservice and potentially sets himself/herself up for future malpractice claims.hi tm,
i really dont see much of a downside to a trust. are you counting the one-time need for re-titling ? i suppose that is a bit of an inconvenience. but if that is your biggest downside, i dont think you have much to fight with !!
You like trusts and believe them the best, at least for your circumstances. And perhaps they best for you. I won't argue that since I don't know your circumstances. In any event you are happy with them and that's what matters for you. But again, do not assume that trusts are the best thing for everyone in every circumstance in each jurisdiction in the U.S. They aren't. There are just too may different circumstances and the laws vary too much much from one jurisdiction to another to say that any one estate planning device is the best for everyone in all jurisdictions.
I will agree with one thing. If you want to delay distribution of the trust assets and subject that distribution to various limitations then you do need a trust. But as I said before, very few clients want to do that — even after that option is pointed out to them. You obviously do, but in that respect you are distinctly in the minority of people out there.
There are almost an infinite variety of ways trusts can be set up to work. Those that delay distribution of some or all of the trust assets after the grantors death can be set up all kinds of ways, not just using spendthrift limitations. And of course, most clients don't have a business that they set up to carry on for years within the trust, but of course that is a possibility. Whether that's a good idea or not depends on the kind of business, the client's circumstances and what his/her goals are.truly, i do not think that most of these attorneys know about the live-on trust. or at least they do not have a trust document to support it - that sort of trust does need a document with a spendthrift clause, and many other clauses to deal with a business entity that survives.