2. ?
• What is estate planning?
• How many people are legally prepared for
death?
• What keeps people from doing estate
planning?
• At what age should you start planning for
transfer of your estate?
3. REFERENCES
• PLANNING AHEAD; DIFFICULT
DECISIONS University of Wyoming
Extension bulletin series; September
2013; Aaron Lyttle, Cole Ehmke, Mary
Martin, Bill Taylor; available at
http://www.wyomingextension.org/publicati
ons and enter Lyttle as author
• Aaron Lyttle, attorney-at-law with
Long, Reimer, Winegar, Beppler
4. SIX MAJOR QUESTIONS
• Who will make my financial decisions when I
can’t make them?
• Who will make my health-care decisions
when I can’t make them?
• What will happen to my property after I die?
• What will happen to my remains?
• What is the legal procedure for transferring
my estate to my heirs?
• Who will care for my minor children?
5. THREE OTHER IMPORTANT QUESTIONS
• What are the Wyoming requirements for
valid wills?
• How do you revoke a will?
• What other tools are available?
6. FINANCIAL DECISIONS
• Delegated with a Durable Power of Attorney
• Allows agent to make financial decisions on
your behalf
• Can delegate anything you could do yourself
– From narrow (close an account) to broad (make
all decisions on your behalf
– Typical:
•
•
•
•
Opening & closing accounts
Borrowing & lending
Giving gifts
Settling lawsuits
7. DURABLE POWER OF ATTORNEY
• Two types:
– Immediate – goes into effect immediately
• For those:
– Presently having difficulty managing affairs
– Couple who own property jointly
– Springing – goes into effect when you are legally
determined incompetent
• Often specifies conditions necessary for incompetency
– E.g., 1 or 2 doctors make determination
(Traditional POA becomes invalid when you
become incompetent)
8. HEALTH-CARE DECISIONS
• Delegated via an Advance Health Care
Directive
– Modern combination of Health Care POA and
Advance Directive or Living Will
– Binding decisions regarding end-of-life
options
– Health Care POA portion like Durable
POA, but limited to health decisions
• Goes into effect when primary health-care provider
determines you can’t make decisions
9. HEALTH-CARE DECISIONS (cont.)
• Decisions you can make in an Advance
Health Care Directive
– Name a guardian for yourself
– Direct to what degree you want your life
prolonged
– Direct whether you want CPR
– Indicate whether you want to donate organs
or your body
– Name a primary physician(s) to determine
your capacity to make decisions
10. HEALTH-CARE DECISIONS (cont.)
• Advance Health Care Directive
– Must be written, signed, dated
– Notarized or signed by two witnesses
– Can be revoked or changed at any time
– Only gives power to terminate lifesupport, never to assist with suicide or
euthanize
11. PROPERTY
• Intestate – without a will
– According to a formula set in state statue
– Spouse & children
• Spouse – 50%
• Children (or their heirs) split remaining 50%
– Spouse only – 100%
12. PROPERTY (cont.)
• Intestate – without a will (cont.)
– No Spouse
1. Children & their heirs
2. Parents, siblings and their heirs
3. Grandparent, uncles, aunts, and their heirs
– No heirs
•
State of WY – 100%
– Court will appoint personal representative
•
Old term – “administrator”
13. PROPERTY (cont.)
• Testate – a valid will is present
– “Surviving spouse’s elective share”:
• Spouse & children
– Spouse – may take up to 50% if any of the children are
his/hers even if the will sets a lesser amount
– Spouse – may take up to 25% if none of the children are
his/hers
• Spouse only – may take up to 50% even if will sets
a lesser amount
14. PROPERTY (cont.)
• Testate – a valid will is present (cont.)
– Benefits:
• Name a personal representative (executor,
administrator)
• Written list of who receives specific property
• Name someone as guardian of children
• Name someone to take care of pets
• Require beneficiaries inheritance held in trust until
a specified age
• Other decisions regarding administration &
taxation of estate
15. VALID WILL
• Wyoming requirements:
– In writing or typed, signed, dated
– Two competent, disinterested witnesses
– Notarization not required, but significantly
eases the process
16. VALID WILL (cont.)
• Wyoming requirements (cont.):
– Proved
• “Self-proving” – witnesses sign notarized affidavit
stating will was executed by person signing it
– Unnecessary for witnesses to later testify to validity
– Probated without further proof
• Non “self-proving” – validity must be proven by
written or oral testimony of one of the witnesses
– If witnesses are unavailable, must be proved by
testimony of 2 disinterested witnesses
17. VALID WILL (cont.)
• Holographic will
– Entirely in testator’s handwriting
– Signed by testator
– Not recommended except in emergency
– Must be proven before probate
18. REVOCABLE?
• Will or any part revoked by:
– New will that revokes the prior will or part of it
– By inconsistency between new will and past will
– Being “burned, torn, cancelled, obliterated or
destroyed” by testator w/ intent and purpose of
revoking it
• Divorce revokes any disposition or
appointment of property, any conferring of
general or special powers, and any
nomination to executor, trustee, conservator
or guardian of former spouse, unless
specifically stated otherwise in latest will.
19. REMAINS
• No instructions made:
– Disposition decided by:
• Spouse; adult children; parents; siblings;
grandparents; stepchildren; guardians – in that
order
• Written instructions regarding
“entombment, burial or cremation” or
authorizing another person to make those
decisions:
– Funeral director or undertake must follow
20. REMAINS (cont.)
• Helpful to prepay funeral or burial
– Provides certainty & relieves family of burden
• Can prepare written document with funeral
wishes
– Not legally binding, but helpful to others
• Should discuss wishes w/ family & heirs
before death
– Estate planning documents often not found or
reviewed until after funeral
21. PROBATE
• Process of transferring property from dead
person to living person(s)
• Can take several months
• Personal representative & attorney entitled
to feel based on % of probate estate value
– May collect additional fees for extraordinary
services or costs
• Public and subject to mandatory court
supervision
22. SUMMARY PROBATE
• Process for estates of $200,000 or less
• Persons claiming to be distributees may
file application to district court after 30
days from death
• Typically less difficult, time-consuming,
costly then formal probate
23. MINOR CHILDREN
• Nominate guardian(s) or conservator(s)
– Guardian – appointed by court to manage a
person
– Conservator – appointed by court to manage
a person’s property
– Nominees in will given preference by court
– Nominees will be examined by court and court
will make decision based on determination of
what is in best interest of child
24. TRUSTS
• Often used to avoid probate
• Establishes relationship between settlor, a
trustee, & beneficiaries
– Settlor transfers property to trustee
– Trustee manages property
– Beneficiaries benefit
• Trust never dies – probate required to
pass property from dead to living
25. TRUSTS (cont.)
• Typically, settlor transfers as much property
as possible during his/her life and uses pourover will to catch anything not yet transferred
at death
• Advantages:
– More expensive then wills up front, but save
probate costs
– Privacy
– Increased property control
– Minimizing transfer taxes (if estate is over
$5M/person or $10M/couple)
28. OTHER TOOLS
• Living Trust (Revocable Trust)
– Created during life to manage property &
provide ongoing management & distribution of
property after death w/o probate
– Funded via transfers during life and pour-over
will at death
• Pour-Over Will
– Transfers property at death to previously
established trust
29. OTHER TOOLS (cont.)
• Joint Ownership W/ Rights of Survivorship
(Joint Tenancy)
– Whichever person survives the other receives
full ownership of property
– Used to avoid probate
• Beneficiary Designations
– Transfer benefits of life
insurance, pension, IRA, annuity, other payon-death proceeds
30. OTHER TOOLS (cont.)
• Testamentary Trust
– Takes effect at death
– Trustee manages property for minor or
incapacitated heir
• Bypass Trust (Credit Shelter Trust)
– Allows spouse to take advantage of lifetime
applicable exclusion
– Limit (January 1, 2013) - $5M/person,
$10M/couple
31. OTHER TOOLS (cont.)
• Irrevocable Life Insurance Trust (ILIT)
– Trust to hold life insurance policies
– Creator pays amount to trust equal to annual gift
tax exclusion to pay policy premiums
– Prevents life insurance proceeds from being
subjected to estate taxes
• Family Business Arrangements
– Documented business succession plan between
owners
– Type of business structure will affect what plan is
used
32. OTHER TOOLS (cont.)
• Charitable Gift Designations
– Intent to transfer assets to charity as
designated by will or trust
• Minor’s Trust
– Irrevocable trust which moves property from
estate to benefit minor children or
grandchildren
• TOD/POD
– Transfer-on-Death (TOD) and Payable-onDeath (POD) designations on accounts and
investments
33. FINAL THOUGHTS
• Discuss estate and surrounding issues w/
loved ones and trusted advisors
– Find out their interests and preferences
– Make decisions about what actions to
take, what to avoid
• See an attorney to help you through all the
alternatives and to prepare the final
documents
• Whenever circumstances or your
intentions change, change the necessary
documents