Estate Planning
by Neda Dabestani-Ryba
from ezinearticles.com
Estate planning can enable you to control your property while
you are alive, take care of you and your loved ones if you
become disabled, and give what you have to whom you want,
the way you want, and when you want, and if you wish, you
can save every last tax dollar, professional fee, and court
cost possible.
Estate planners frequently begin the estate planning process
by analyzing clients' personal and financial dreams, aspirations,
fears and objectives. The financial side of this analysis
usually begins with the following question: "What do
you own and how do you own it?" More often than not clients
say "I know what I own, but I do not know how I own it."
The way that you own your property will greatly effect your
estate plan.
There are three frequently used forms of ownership of property:
"fee simple," "tenancy in common," and
"joint tenancy with right of survivorship."
Fee simple ownership means that you own property by yourself
as the sole and absolute owner. You can give it away, sell
it, or keep it and control who will inherit it upon your death.
Tenancy in common means that you own property with at least
one other person. You do not own the entire asset. Let us
assume that you and a friend own a 100-page book and that
you own it as tenants in common. Each of you owns 50 percent
of the book; that is, each of you owns fifty pages. Each of
you could give your fifty pages to anyone you like while you
are each alive. Each of you can leave your fifty pages to
anyone at your death. In short, each of you is the absolute
owner of each of your respective shares of the book. There
is no limit to the number of tenants who can own something
with others in tenants in common. Commonly two, three, or
four people purchase property together, with each owning one-half,
one-third, or one-quarter of the property.
Joint tenants with right of survivorship is a very commonly
used method of owning property. This form of ownership is
commonly used but greatly misunderstood by the public. Let
us assume again that you and a friend own a 100-page book.
This time you own the book as joint tenants with right of
survivorship. Unlike tenants in common where you each own
50 percent of the book, in joint tenants with right of survivorship
you each own 100 percent of the book. Each of you owns the
entire book. There is no limit to the number of tenants who
can own something with others as joint tenants with right
of survivorship. While you are alive, you can sell or give
your part away. Such actions would change the nature of ownership
of the property between the purchaser/recipient of the gift
and the remaining tenants. The survivorship feature means
that as each individual joint tenant dies, the deceased person's
interest is automatically distributed by operation of law
to the remaining joint tenants. This is what might be called
the "winner takes all" game.
Let us assume that four people own a beach house as joint
tenants with right of survivorship. As long as more than one
of them is alive, none of their wills or trusts will control
the disposition of the beach house. If one of them outlives
all of the others, she could distribute the house to whomever
she wants at her death and totally exclude the others' families
and loved ones.
Tenants by the entirety is a special form of joint ownership
that works the same as joint tenancy with right of survivorship.
It is used in some states by a husband and wife to own real
estate. For our purposes, think of this form of ownership
as a special form of joint tenancy for a married couple. The
married couple is viewed as one person.
In summary, if you own property in fee simple you own it
all, you can give it away, sell it or leave it to your chosen
beneficiaries upon your death. If you own property in tenants
in common you own part of it, you can give your part away,
you can sell your part, and leave your part on death. If you
own property in joint tenancy you own all of it with someone
else, you can give your interest away, you can sell your interest
but you cannot leave your interest on death.
How do you own your property? Why do you own it the way that
you own it? It is very likely that decisions regarding the
form of ownership of your property were made by well intentioned
others. Did the settlement attorney ask how you want to own
your home? Did your real estate agent ask you this question?
If he or she did, is your home titled the way you requested?
When you went to the bank to open a checking account, did
your banker discuss the various forms of ownership with you?
When you opened your brokerage account, did your advisor discuss
the importance and ramifications of account title? Chances
are your settlement attorney, banker, and financial advisor
titled your assets in joint tenancy with right of survivorship
if your are married and in your sole name if you are single,
widowed, or divorced.
Make sure you know what you own and how you own it. Do your
estate planning documents control your property? Make certain
that what you own, how you own it, and your estate plan are
consistent with your specific planning dreams and aspirations.
Neda Dabestani-Ryba is a licensed Realtor in Maryland. She
is a member of the President's Circle of Top Real Estate Professionals.
She can be reached at (800) 536-3806 or visit her website
for more information: http://neda.dabestani.pcragent.com/
Prudential Carruthers REALTORS is an independently owned and
operated member of Prudential Real Estate Affiliates, Inc.,
a Prudential Financial company. Equal Housing Opportunity.
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