Offshore estate planning

The Wall Street Journal has this interesting article on offshore estate planning tactics with reference to Mitt Romney’s IRA. If I can help you with offshore or domestic estate planning issues, please call me at your convenience.

(c) 2012, Stephen M. Johnson, Esq.

Passing on Your Vacation Home

The Wall Street Journal offers some interesting insights about different ways families can keep a vacation home or similar special property in the family for generations to come while minimizing taxes. If I can help you pass your vacation home on to the next generation in your family, give me a call at your convenience.

(c) 2012, Stephen M. Johnson, Esq.

“Mom/Dad, I need some money…”

CNBC offers this advice to parents whose children want more money. If you need counsel on estate planning or gifting options to your children, give me a call to schedule a convenient appointment.

(c) 2012, Stephen M. Johnson, Esq.

The Diverse 1%

As much as some populists would like us to think that the 1% fit into a mold and are as predictable and uniform as the rising sun each morning, the New York Times provides a more nuanced portrait of the wealthiest 1% of Americans.

(c) 2012, Stephen M. Johnson, Esq.

The Politics of Estate Planning

Estate planning tactics look to become a hot political issue this election cycle. The Daily Mail reports on rumors that former Gov. and Republican Presidential Candidate Mitt Romney may have a small fortune in offshore bank accounts. Of course, affluent Democrats and Republicans alike engage in estate planning, including some controversial tactics. Having an offshore bank account or trust is perfectly legal assuming that the formalities and tax reporting requirements are followed. But in politics, facts often matter less than perceptions, feelings, and opinion. If I can help you with questions about trusts, estate planning, or offshore bank accounts, please call me at your convenience.

(c) 2012, Stephen M. Johnson, Esq.

Wealth Tax?

Robert Frank, of the Wall Street Journal’s Wealth Report blog, offers this reflection on practical problems of a wealth tax. A wealth tax sounds like a variation of a property tax, which has historically been a local or state level levy. Just as various deductions, loopholes, and definitions of “income” have developed in the income tax context, so one would expect similar issues for a wealth tax (including valuation issues discussed in the article by Mr. Frank). A wealth tax is the wrong message to send to entrepreneurs and capitalists – we’re going to punish your success. And economics teaching that tax increases in a down economy are counterproductive. What do you think? Do you support or oppose a wealth tax? Why?

(c) 2012, Stephen M. Johnson, Esq.

2011 Tax Deadline Extended

Some news you can use, for lawyers and accountants (and others) preparing or filing 2011 tax returns. Because April 15, the traditional tax deadline, falls on a Sunday in 2012 and the 16th is a D.C. holiday (Emancipation Day), your 2011 tax returns won’t be due until Tuesday, April 17, 2012. Of course, you can still file for a 6 month extension via Form 4868, which pushes your (individual income tax) due date out to October 15, 2012 (the IRS also has extension forms for other filers). As one of Kansas City’s favorite sons (and H&R Block co-founder), Henry Bloch, titled his memoir, Many Happy Returns!  It’s a good book that relates a fascinating story of perseverance and growing a family business into an accounting and tax empire, written with warmth and charming anecdotes by a gem of a gentleman.

If I can help you with your individual, corporate, or fiduciary tax returns for 2011, give me a call or send me an email.

(c) 2012, Stephen M. Johnson, Esq.

Time to Sell Your Small Business?

Interesting NY Times article about business owners thinking of selling in the current economy. There’s a wonderful piece of old-fashioned, homespun wisdom quoted: “success is when opportunity and preparation intersect.” Successful business people have to be alert for new and emerging opportunities to capitalize on those venues and maximize their enterprise profitability. Perhaps a few business successes come down to being in the right place in the right time, serendipity, or luck, but most business people (and certainly most lawyers) would say that chance favors the prepared – you have to do your homework, which will often show you openings or opportunities that your competitors don’t see. Or as one early rising quipster put it, the comfort of being awake near dawn is “my competition is still sleeping,” so an edge or lead can be acquired. In this economy, business people and successful individuals must capitalize on every edge or lead they can find or create to distinguish themselves and get ahead.

The article’s advice reminds me of a piece of financial/investment advice I read a couple years ago in The Great Depression Ahead by (gloom and doom) economist Harry S. Dent. If I can help you in the process of selling your business or thinking about the pros and cons of the sale decision, give me a call or email me to set up a convenient appointment. If you are going to sell your business, getting the wheels of the deal in motion before December 31 is ideal for tax purposes.

(c) 2011, Stephen M. Johnson, Esq.

Planning for Life’s Unexpected Moments

CNBC has this story of a family who benefited greatly from doing basic estate planning, when the unexpected happened and the father and family patriarch died suddenly. Every adult – regardless of age, wealth level, or other factors – needs a will, a living will, and medical and financial durable powers of attorney. To live life without these basic estate planning documents is to play Russian roulette with your future and your family’s.

(c) 2011, Stephen M. Johnson, Esq. All rights reserved.

The Brave New World of Estate Planning – Trusts and Estates in 2011

As the 2010 holiday season descended upon America, Congress passed and President Obama signed an extension of the 2001 Bush tax cuts.  The new tax law has many provisions that last until the 2012 election, but most significant for our purposes are the new estate tax and the new gift tax.  The federal estate tax is now 35% on any estates over $5 million for a single person or $10 million for a married couple.  The new gift tax is 50% of any gift to a person of over $13,000 per year with the lifetime exclusion (the maximum amount you can give to someone other than a spouse during your lifetime) now at $5 million from its prior $1 million threshold.  Count on the 2001 Bush tax cut extension to be a big deal for President Obama and his Republican colleagues in 2012, especially with the economic cauldron of high unemployment, exploding deficits, promiscuous and unsustainable spending, a weakening dollar, states teetering on the edge of bankruptcy, and potential inflationary pressures, all boiling to a simmering storm of uncertainty and populist discontent.

Many estate planning attorneys, including many that I have talked with in the Kansas City area, find these new developments very troublesome.  Won’t it eliminate our clients? Not many people have $5 or $10 million, the argument goes.  Those that do already have relationships with private banks, investment firms, and noted law firms. Does anyone still need a trust?  Or do we simply terminate trusts and execute new I-love-you wills that leave everything to the spouse and children?  Won’t that kill our revenue streams from trust drafting and asset re-titling? Is it worth it to be an estate planning attorney any more? These are all good questions that need to be answered and I plan to answer soon in much more detail.

For now, let’s focus on what every client needs: (1) a will (2) a living will (3) a durable medical power of attorney and (4) a durable financial power of attorney.  Anyone over the age of 18 who doesn’t have these legal instruments in place risks catastrophic consequences a la Terri Schiavo and Nancy Cruzan if they get in a car accident or die leaving student loan debt (or other secured debts, like a home mortgage) for their parents (buying life insurance to pay these debts off may be wise). If you are married or have children, the stakes are even higher – your spouse might have to probate your estate and get the Court to appoint them Guardian and Conservator of your child.

Maybe you’re an individual and figure you’re fine, you don’t drive a Ferrari or have millions of dollars, so you don’t need an estate plan, right? Wrong. An estate plan doesn’t need to be expensive or complicated, but you need one, whether you’re Bill Gates or Bob Jones the college student.  Call (913-707-9220) or email me (steve@johnsonlawkc.com) if I can help.

(C) 2011, Stephen M. Johnson