Trusts to avoid probate and sometimes reduce
NJ Estate Tax
Compiled by Kenneth Vercammen
Probate is defined as the procedure by
which an Executor proceeds to admit a Will to the jurisdiction of the Surrogate
Court, which is proved to be valid or invalid. The term generally includes all
matters relating to the administration of estates. There are instances where Surrogate Court
monitoring of the estate is desirable.
Much has been written about the disadvantages of probate. Following are just a few of the problems
associated with probate and why certain people set up Trusts in addition to
Wills.
Lack
Of Privacy
Documents filed with the Surrogate Court
are public information. They are
available for inspection to anyone who asks. In large estates, which require an
accounting, your probate file will contain a complete list of all assets
devised by your Will including business assets.
This lack of privacy may lead to problems among family members who now
know the plan of distribution and may then contest any provisions with which
they disagree. Disinherited relatives
and creditors are notified and given time by the Court to contest the Will
distribution.
Time
Consuming
The probate of an estate may take
several months to several years to complete.
During that time family members may have to apply to the Surrogate Court
for an allowance.
Fragmentation
- Real Estate
If you own real property in more than
one state, probate rules must be
followed in each state in which real property is located. The cost and time may be increased.
Revocable Living Trust & Irrevocable
Trusts
A Revocable Living Trust is a legal
device that allows you to maintain complete control over your assets and avoids
Probate. However, a Revocable Trust does
not reduce Estate Tax and does not protect your assets from nursing home fees.
Because there is no probate of a
Revocable Living Trust, your private financial matters remain private, there
are no probate costs, no long delays and loss of control, and no fragmentation
of the estate. However, since you still control the trust, it cannot shield
assets from Nursing Home, Medicaid or Estate Taxes. To do that, you will need
to hire an attorney to prepare an Irrevocable Trust. Fees are minimum $3,000-
$5,000 for trusts.
A Revocable Living Trust can easily be
structured to automatically create separate Trusts upon the death of either
your spouse. Here's how it works. If the wife dies first, the husband has total
control of his Trust. Also, for the remainder of his life, he receives all
income from her Trust and has the use of the assets whenever needed for living
expenses. When he dies, each Trust will
claim its tax exemption, and some will go tax-free to their children, or any
other beneficiary they designate, without having to go through probate.
Irrevocable
Trust:
A Trust, which cannot be changed or
canceled once, it is set up without the consent of the beneficiary. contributions
cannot be taken out of the trust by the grantor. Irrevocable trusts offer tax
advantages that revocable trusts don't, for example by enabling a person to
give money and assets away even before he/she dies. Opposite of revocable
trust.
You
Maintain Complete Control Over Your Property In a Revocable Living Trust
The principle behind a Revocable Living
Trust is simple. When you establish a
Living Trust, you transfer all your property into the Trust, and then name
yourself as trustee, or you can name you and your spouse as co-trustees of the
Trust. The trustees maintain complete
control over the property, the same control you had before your property was
placed in trust You can buy, sell,
borrow, pledge, or collateralize the trust property. You can even discontinue the Trust if you
choose. That is why it is called a
"Revocable" Living Trust. We
will explain the "Irrevocable Trust" at the end of the article.
Transferring
Property Into the Trust
The transfer of title to property into
the Trust is a relatively simple matter when you hire an attorney. Anywhere you
have assets, you will get help in transferring your property into the
Trust. Your attorney, securities
investor, etc., will provide you with assistance needed to transfer your
property into your Revocable Living Trust.
Your attorney will provide the information and assistance you need to
properly fund your Trust.
Complete
Privacy
Probate records are public, your Trust
documents are private. A Trust will
safeguard the privacy of your family and your private financial matters.
Naming
A Trustee
Most people name themselves and their
spouse as the initial Trustees of a Revocable Trust. This is usually true
unless one spouse is incapacitated to the point that he or she is not able to
manage your assets in the same way you do now. However, for an Irrevocable or
Medicaid trust, the spouse cannot be the trustee.
Gifts
To Religious And Charitable Organizations
Many people wish to give a portion or
sometimes all of their assets to a religious or charitable organization in
order to carry on the work of those organizations that have given them comfort
or peace of mind during their lifetimes.
This is easily accomplished with a Revocable Living Trust.
NJ
Estate Tax
A New Jersey estate tax return must be filed if
the decedent's gross estate plus adjusted taxable gifts exceeds $675,000. It
must be filed within nine months of the decedent's death (nine months plus 30
days if the Form 706 method is used).
Current Federal tax laws allow you to
leave an unlimited amount to a spouse, tax-free. When your spouse dies, the
estate is entitled to a $5,250,000 tax exemption. The first $5,250,000 goes to
your beneficiaries free of estate tax. However, the NJ Estate Tax starts at
$675,000.
The NJ Estate
Tax is in addition to any NJ Inheritance Tax.
Who Must File
A New Jersey
estate tax return must be filed if the decedent’s Gross Estate exceeds
$675,000. There is a substantial tax that must be paid after the 2nd
spouse dies on amounts over $675,000.
You can hire an attorney to set up Trusts to try to reduce taxes due. A
separate stand alone Trust has a minimum fee for $2,000. We charge a minimum
fee of $600 for each Trust within a Will.
Even if your net worth is well below the Federal threshold where the
federal estate tax becomes an issue, the New Jersey Estate Tax may still be a
problem. The New Jersey Estate Tax affects any person or married couple with
net worth over $675,000. There is no exemption for assets you leave to
your children; those assets are fully taxed. There is also no exemption for the
value of your home and life insurance, so it is easy to hit the $675,000
threshold very quickly.
If you have assets such as bank accounts
in joint names, or bank accounts payable upon death, these go directly to the
beneficiary. Your Will cannot change who the beneficiary is on a joint account,
payable upon death accounts, or other assets such as Life Insurance policies.
You would have to directly contact the bank or company where the assets are held
and either direct that they change the beneficiary or not list any beneficiary
at all other than your Estate.
Therefore, if you have $1,200,000 in assets, you can change the
ownership and beneficiary of assets so the husband owns $600,000 and the wife owns
the other $600,000.
Examples of NJ Estate Tax due
if no estate planning
Estate of $800,000
Your Estimated Federal Estate Tax: 0.00
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Your State Taxable Estate Value: $740,000.00
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Your Estimated State Estate Tax: $22,799.60
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If Estate
Value: $900,000.00
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Your Estimated
Federal Estate Tax: $0.00
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Your State Taxable Estate
Value: $840,000.00
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Your Estimated State Estate Tax: $27,600.00
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WHAT IS CREDIT SHELTER TRUST IN A WILL?
The Credit Shelter Trust (sometimes
referred to as a “Bypass Trust” or an “A/B Trust”) is a popular estate
planning technique used by married couples with combined assets in excess
of $675,000. The purpose of the Credit Shelter Trust is to avoid the
wasting of federal and state exemptions on the death of the first spouse.
Instead of leaving all assets to the surviving spouse and thereby exposing
the surviving spouse’s estate to more tax, both spouse’s Wills are drafted
to establish a Credit Shelter Trust to come into existence and be funded on
the first spouse’s death.
In a typical Credit Shelter Trust, the
surviving spouse is entitled to receive all of the income from the Trust
for his or her lifetime, and has the right to demand principal
distributions for his or her health, education, support and maintenance in
his or her accustomed manner of living. Distributions in excess of that
standard require the cooperation of a Co-Trustee – often an adult child of
the surviving spouse or a trust department of a bank.
The amount, which funds a typical
Credit Shelter Trust, varies according to a particular Client’s financial
and family circumstances. For Federal Estate Tax purposes, a Credit Shelter
Trust can be funded with the Decedent’s remaining federal estate tax
exemption ($5.2 million as of 2014 if no prior gifts have been made).
However, in New Jersey, since the state estate tax exemption is only
$675,000, if the Credit Shelter Trust is funded with more than $675,000,
this will cause some New Jersey Estate Tax to be paid. For example, if the
$2 million is funded, the tax to the State of New Jersey is $99,600.
Because of this, many Clients choose to fund the Credit Shelter Trust with
only $675,000.
If the Credit Shelter Trust technique
is implemented as part of a Client’s Estate Plan, you can hire the
attorneys for a separate fee to
assist the Client in re-titling his or her assets so that assets are
available to fund the Credit Shelter Trust. Re-titling is necessary because
most Clients tend to hold assets jointly with right of survivorship and
assets must be titled individually in a person’s name in order to be
eligible to fund a Credit Shelter Trust. We work with a tax attorney to
help our clients.
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Irrevocable Trust
Accounts: Irrevocable trust accounts are deposits held by a trust established
by statute or a written trust agreement in which the grantor (the creator of
the trust - also referred to as a trustor or settlor) contributes deposits or
other property and gives up all power to cancel or change the trust.
An irrevocable trust
also may come into existence upon the death of an owner of a revocable trust.
The reason is that the owner no longer can revoke or change the terms of the
trust. If a trust has multiple owners and one owner passes away, the trust
agreement may call for the trust to split into an irrevocable trust and a
revocable trust owned by the survivor. Because these two trusts are held
under different ownership types, the insurance coverage may be very
different, even if the beneficiaries have not changed.
WHAT IS MEDICAID..........
Medicaid is a Federal
medical bills assistance program that pays medical bills for eligible, needy
persons. It is administered by each state. All payments are made directly to
the providers of medical and other health care services. The Medicaid-eligible
person does not pay the health care provider for services. The only exception
is a patient in a Medicaid-approved nursing facility who may be required to
contribute part of his/her income toward the cost of care.
It is important to note
Medicaid typically has a lien on assets you own.
Someone can avoid
Medicaid and nursing home liens by settling up an Irrevocable Trust and
waiting 60 months to apply for Medicaid.
Kenneth A. Vercammen is an Edison, Middlesex
County, NJ trial attorney who has published 125 articles in national and New
Jersey publications on business and litigation topics. He often lectures to
trial lawyers of the American Bar Association, New Jersey State Bar
Association and Middlesex County Bar Association.
He is a highly regarded
lecturer on litigation issues for the American Bar Association, ICLE, New
Jersey State Bar Association and Middlesex County Bar Association. His
articles have been published by New Jersey Law Journal, ABA Law Practice
Management Magazine, and New Jersey Lawyer.
He is co-chair of the ABA Probate & Estate Planning Committee.
He has served as a
Special Acting Prosecutor in nine different cities and towns in New Jersey
and also successfully handled over One thousand Municipal Court and Superior
Court matters in the past 28 years.
In his private
practice, he has devoted a substantial portion of his professional time to
the preparation and trial of litigated matters. He has appeared in Courts
throughout New Jersey several times each week on Criminal and Litigation
matters, Municipal Court trials, and contested Probate hearings. He serves as the Editor of the popular
legal website www.njlaws.com
KENNETH VERCAMMEN &
ASSOCIATES, PC
ATTORNEY AT LAW
2053 Woodbridge Ave.
Edison, NJ 08817
(Phone) 732-572-0500
(Fax) 732-572-0030
website: www.njlaws.com
www.CentralJerseyElderLaw.com
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