Estate Planning Essentials - The Durable Power of Attorney

A Durable Power of Attorney is the best way to ensure your affairs are managed if you become incapacitated or disabled. A durable power of attorney will either become effective when you are incapacitated or remain in effect after incapacitation depending on how it’s written. Once the durable power of attorney becomes effective, the person appointed to act for you, called an attorney-in-fact, is allowed to pay bills, invest assets, file tax returns and sign contracts among other things. You should also include language so health care decisions can be made when you are unable to communicate. You may want to inform the attorney-in-fact what, if any, medical treatment you want administered at the end of your life. If you do not have a power of attorney, a guardianship proceeding may be necessary to appoint someone to manage your affairs. These proceedings can be long and costly so a well drafted power of attorney is definitely worthwhile.

Estate Planning Essentials: Your Will

Everyone has an estate plan, whether you know it or not. If you have a Will and/or related documents you know you have a plan. But even if you don’t have a Will, you still have a plan. That plan is set out by the government, and it is laid out in our laws of intestacy. Each state has its own laws of intestate succession. Generally those laws follow what the legislature thinks most people want. For instance, if you are married your property goes to your surviving spouse. If you are not married and have kids, your property goes to those kids in equal shares. If you are not married and have no kids, we look to parents, then siblings and so forth.

There are, however, major gaps in this “estate plan.” For instance, if you have a minor child, nothing says who will raise that child if both parents are deceased. Additionally, state laws leave property to a beneficiary outright even if a trust for such beneficiary would be more prudent (in the case of a minor child some form of conservatorship may be necessary). Another problem is a state’s laws of intestacy are not set up to deal with other major planning problems such as: estate tax issues, care for a disabled spouse or a special needs child and business succession issues for the self-employed.

This is where having a comprehensive Will that is tailored to your specific situation can be vital. Your Will sets out who will administer your estate, who will receive what property and in what percentages and who will raise your children. If you have a taxable estate, which in Washington today, is anyone whose estate is valued at more than $2 million, you can set up a trust for your spouse to make sure that you minimize or perhaps avoid estate taxes. If you don’t have a taxable estate, but think a surviving spouse may become disabled in his or her later years, a Will is one of the few tools that can be used to assist a loved one with care while not having to spend all your assets to qualify for assistance. In this instance we can often set up a trust for a surviving spouse or special needs child to assist with quality of life while allowing them to qualify or continue to qualify for Medicaid or other forms of assistance.

In short, your Will can accomplish many goals all at once. If you, like millions of other people, have put off making one, I encourage you to tackle this project in the new year.