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Q. Do
married couples who own everything jointly need to
worry about estate planning?
A. Yes.
Everyone should be concerned about estate planning.
The tax laws created the unlimited marital deduction
in 1981, which alleviated many of the tax concerns
for married couples upon the death of the first
spouse. Now it is possible to give your spouse an
unlimited amount of money during lifetime or upon
death, tax-free.
However, if a
decedent dies with a will or trust that was executed
before September 1981 which expressly provided that
the spouse receive the maximum amount of property
qualifying for the marital deduction, that amount is
deemed to be the prior maximum, not the
new unlimited amount, unless the formula is
amended after September 1981, specifically referring
to the new amount.
Married couples
should not delay their estate planning until the
first spouse dies because:
1.
Both could die at the same
time in a common accident;
2.
One could become
incompetent and the other one die;
3.
Both could become
incompetent within a very short period of one
another;
4.
After the death of the
first spouse, the one surviving may not have or take
the opportunity to adequately plan his or her
estate.
If
you are fortunate enough to be married, why not do
your estate planning together as a team instead of
leaving it for the surviving spouse to worry over?
Married couples often have durable family powers of
attorney for one another, which is an excellent tool
if one becomes incompetent or incapable of signing
checks, stock certificates or other financial
instruments. Powers of attorney become ineffective
upon death or when one becomes adjudicated
incompetent. |