What is
a living(or loving) trust?
Is a living trust right for me?
What are the advantages or uses of living trusts?
What are the disadvantages of a living trust?
Are there any myths that surround living trusts?
How do I decide if I need a living trust or a will?
To
a lawyer, a living (or loving) trust is a revocable intervivos
trust. It is a trust that can be revoked. If you establish a trust
and then decide it is not working as you wanted, or something
better comes along, you can cancel it. It is intervivos, it is
created during life. This is in contrast to a testamentary trust,
which is a part of your will and pops up on your death.
A living trust is the
generic name for a trust that is generally promoted as avoiding
probate. A loving trust is a copyrighted name for a type of living
trust.
It may be but they
are not right for everyone. Over the last 10 years these trusts
have been touted as the modern way. Many insurance agents and
financial advisors have used ads for living trusts as leaders
to hold "seminars." Those meetings, generally at some local hotel,
not only extolled the virtues of living trusts but also were an
opportunity to sell life insurance or other financial services.
The interest
in living trusts was driven by people's general fear of dying,
lawyers and probate. This was augmented by family stories and
people moving here from other states.
Family
Stories. Almost every family has a story of the problems that
occurred when grandfather died. These stories tend to depict the
probate process as an expensive and heart- rending villain. If
that is true, grandpa died before 1954 under the old probate system.
Otherwise, the problems surrounding grandfather's death were the
result of poor planning, tax problems, creditor problems or family
battles. None of these problems are solved more by a living trust
than a will.
Immigrants
from Other States. In some states, California is an excellent
example, the probate process is very unwieldy and expensive. Almost
all well-informed Californians have a living trust. When these
people, and people from other "probate challenged" states, move
to Texas, they bring those beliefs with them. Their concern with
probate is spread to other Texans.
Trusts generally are
a marvelous invention. They are extremely flexible and can accomplish
a variety of tasks. Living trusts are no different. While it is
generally referred to as a probate avoidance device, it can serve
several functions:
- Avoids
Probate. If all of your assets are in the trust at the time
of your death, there will be no need to probate your will. Actually,
your non probate assets, life insurance retirement benefits,
etc., do not have to be in the trust, they also pass outside
of the will. But it is important to make sure that your estate
is not named as the beneficiary of any of these assets.
- Provides
Privacy. Because probate is not that troublesome in Texas,
this is one of the primary reasons for a living trust in Texas.
When a will is probated, all of your probate assets have to
be listed on an inventory and filed with the clerk as a part
of the public record. That is not true of assets in a living
trust. If privacy of assets is important, a living trust may
be appropriate for you.
- Provides
management of some or all assets. Some people use it as
a device for third parties, a child or a trust company for example,
to manage particular assets. With a child this is sometimes
used as a training device.
- Provides
Standby Management of Assets. When the trust is coupled
with a durable power of attorney, the trust is ready to receive
assets if you become incapacitated.
- Avoids
the Possibility of Guardianship of the Estate. If all of
your assets are in a living trust and you become incapacitated,
there is no need for a guardian of your estate. Your successor
trustee will continue to manage your assets. Note that this
does not solve the need for a guardian of the person.
- Avoids
second probate in an other state where real estate is owned.
People who own real estate in another state are subject to a
second probate. Each state in the United States controls title
and ownership of its real estate. A will probated in Texas has
no effect on real estate in Colorado. For it to be effective
there has to be a second probate in Colorado. If you place the
Colorado real estate in a trust, at your death the trustee can
transfer the real estate to your beneficiaries without a probate
proceeding.
- Can
reduce risk contests [not avoid contests completely]. This
is often oversold as a complete cure for contests at your death.
Obviously if you have a trust rather than a will, there will
not be a will contest. The fact that there is a trust contest
instead does not completely eliminate the problem. However,
if the trust has been managed by a third party, someone other
than the decedent or the persons involved in the litigation,
the best example is a trust company, it will provide substantial
third party evidence of the decedent intent and capacity.
- May
Defeat Elective Rights. In Texas surviving spouses have
certain rights: widow's election, homestead and allowance in
lieu of homestead. If all of your assets are in a trust, those
rights may be defeated. There is no Texas law to tell us if
trust assets are subject to these rights.
Like everything, living
trust have their negatives.
- More
expensive to set up. If a living trust is to be funded,
documents must be prepared to transfer the assets into the trust:
deeds for real estate, assignments for notes and insurance policies,
as well as other documents to transfer stocks, bonds and bank
accounts. With a will none of this is necessary, at least not
until someone dies. Those transfers are a basic part of the
probate process: transferring title to the beneficiaries. One
wag once said that a living trust is like going through probate
twice.
For some people this cost and the other issues identified below
are worth the trouble. The job of the attorney is not to make
you take something you do not want, but rather to help you see
the pluses and the minuses of your choice before you act.
- Some
expense to maintain during life. Living trusts require more
care and management than a will. With a will, it goes into a
drawer and until the will is probated, there is no day-to-day
maintenance. A living trust requires some level of maintenance.
- Some
headache to maintain during life. It takes very little effort
to maintain your property in your own name. However, to make
sure all of your assets stay in the trust requires constant
vigilance. The new accounts person at the bank may very well
open your new account in the name of Jerry Jones rather than
Jerry Jones Trustee. Likewise, the title to your new car may
come from the state in the name of Jerry Jones, not Jerry Jones
Trustee. A result of the dealer's error.
Many people, as they get older, prefer to simplify their lives.
A fully funded, self trustee, living trust does not simplify
matters.
At the same time I should say I have been warning people about
this issue for years. However, many people have elected to have
a living trust. I have watched them go out of my office and
wondered how effective it was going to be. Several of them have
now returned to my office after several years and their trusts
are in very good order. The result is very little additional
lawyer's fees and probate is avoided.
I think it depends on the type of person and their level of
determination to properly run the trust.
- Maintaining
extra set of books on trust assets. To be effective, you
will have to maintain a separate set of books on the trust.
- Filing
second set of tax returns on trust income. With one exception,
trusts require a separate tax identification number and each
year you must file a separate income tax return. The exception
is an important one. If the trust is self trusteed, if you are
your own trustee, you may report all of the trust's income and
deductions on your personal return, using your social security
number.
- Homestead:
Risk of loss. Until recently we were concerned about losing
the homestead deduction for ad valorem tax purposes. Several
years ago the Texas legislature made clear that transferring
your home to a living trust would not cause you to lose your
homestead exemption.
We do not have the same comfort regarding creditors. Your home
is exempt from your creditors. There is no law in Texas to tell
us if your home is still exempt from creditors if it has been
transferred to a living trust. People should be very slow to
risk the loss of that valuable right.
Many people solve the problem by transferring assets other than
their home into the trust.
- Due
on Sale and Title Insurance. When transferring real estate
to a trust, the due on sale clause must be considered. Generally
this is not an issue for mortgage holders, however, it is prudent
to get their consent or determine in writing that they have
no objection. Likewise, the effect of the transfer on title
insurance must be considered.
Yes.
- Living
trusts save taxes. This is not true. Wills and living trusts
are virtual tax equivalents. A will (sometimes with a testamentary,
or popup trust, in the will) can save the same taxes that a
living trust can save.
- A
living trust is cheaper than a will and probate. Sometimes,
sometimes not. It depends on your situation. If the trust and
the necessary transfer documents do not cost a great deal more
than a will, and probate is in fact avoided, it can be cheaper.
This needs to be analyzed very carefully.
- Lawyers
charge a percentage of the estate for probate. This is rarely
the case anymore. Years ago the State Bar of Texas had a minimum
fee schedule that provided for a 3% fee for handling an estate.
I know of no lawyers that currently charge a percentage. If
you ever find yourself in the office of one that does you should
be very leery.
Only after conferring
with a competent attorney that you have hired can you determine
if you want a will or a trust. There is no substitute for an attorney
who has been hired to give you his best advice. You should be
extremely cautious of any attorney who has been provided to you
by third parties. They are subject to divided loyalties. They
will have a bias toward whoever is paying their bills. Before
you act, you should consult with an attorney. |