|
WHAT WOULD YOU WANT TO HAPPEN IF YOU DIED TOMORROW?
If you have made a troubling realization or
two after considering the above questions, the more immediate issue might be
what you do not want to happen. The top priority is probably the potential situation
you have identified, and how to correct it. Frequently, an easy solution will
suggest itself simply as a result of thinking through the problem. (If not,
be smart and see an attorney experienced in estate planning. He or she has
most likely dealt with many situations much like yours.)
Some peoples' values, wishes and survivors'
needs, however, really are very simple. So, too, should be their estate plans--perhaps
just a two-page will saying, for example, "Everything to my three children,
in equal shares." Other people have various contingencies to plan for. Some
form of charitable contribution--during life or at death--might be part of their
plans. There might be a need for life insurance. Many want to keep one or
more "strings attached" to payments made to their chosen beneficiaries. These
strings come in infinite varieties, but almost always, keeping strings attached
requires a trust. (Trusts are examined in detail in other tutorials.)
A trust document can be drafted to set forth
a personalized combination of specific instructions, with or without discretionary
judgments allowed to your trustee, so that money is given to whom you want,
when, and for the purposes you specify. This cannot be done with a will alone.
A practical example of this point is the use of a trust by parents, in case
they both die prematurely, to avoid the immediate distribution of assets to
their children upon turning eighteen.
The legal framework of your estate plan is important, but let's look
now at an equally important human factor-choosing the appropriate person to
represent you after you are gone.
|