Farm Progress

A goal of estate planning is to make sure we get our assets to those we want to have them, with minimum shrinkage due to costs, taxes, or other expenses, and to do it with maximum security — to know that all the necessary documents are in force, that we’ve established a way to pay for expenses, and that we’ve tried to reduce those expenses as much as possible.

Hembree Brandon, Editorial director

December 26, 2011

6 Min Read
<p> JOHN WHITE and his daughter, Rylee, left, Flora, Miss., visit with Joy and James Foy, Canton, Miss., at the annual meeting of the Mississippi Farm Bureau Federation.</p>

 

George Steinbrenner, owner of the New York Yankees baseball team, died in 2010. Had he died in 2009 or 2011, his family might not have been able to continue its ownership of the team because of estate taxes.

But because he died in 2010, the tax laws then in effect were such that the family could keep the team.

“It was perfect timing,” says Frank Blossman, estate planning specialist with Mississippi Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company.

“So many times, we talk with people who think they’re close to their goals in estate planning, when in reality they’re quite far away,” he said at the annual meeting of the Mississippi Farm Bureau Federation at Jackson.

Farmers should continually be working with their estate planners to be certain they’re staying abreast of changes in the law and changes in their farm business, he says.

Regardless of the size of your estate, planning is important to insure that “if something happens to you today, your assets will go where you want them to go, to the people you want to have them,” says Bob Hughes, also a Mississippi Farm Bureau Casualty Insurance Company estate planning specialist.

“Years ago, farms were being lost to the tax man when one party in the operation died and taxes came due. Many farmers were asset and land rich, but cash poor, which often made it difficult for heirs to pay estate taxes.
“The IRS isn’t interested in taking land, tractors, cattle, or chickens — they just want you to pay your tax bills. So, planning is important to be sure things are shipshape at the time they’re needed in order to preserve assets and insure their transfer to another generation.

“You need to understand the differences between estate planning and estate tax planning, and some of the challenges your family will face at some point down the road, the strategies that can help you reduce some of the costs and perhaps even some of the taxes.

“Although estate taxes not as much a problem right now as they once were, it looks like they may be starting to rear their ugly heads again.”

In simplest terms, says Hughes, “Your estate is everything you own. When you die, all you own is poured into the funnel that is your estate: personal property, real property, business interests, retirement plans, life insurance, other assets.

“The objective is to pass all this to your heirs. The problem is that everybody’s funnel has leaks. Estate planning attempts to plug as many of those leaks as possible.”

Those leaks, he says, can include estate taxes, partial-year income taxes, any debts owed, attorney/accountant fees, probate costs, final expenses, and others.

Estate planning objectives have to do with accumulation, conservation, and transfer or distribution of assets, Hughes says.

“Almost everyone is in one of those phases. If you don’t yet have an estate, you’re trying to accumulate one. If you’ve accumulated some assets and wealth, you’re interested in preserving it, and with the economy and markets as they are today, preservation is becoming more and more difficult. Others are at a stage of life where they’re interested in transferring their assets to those they love and care about, rather than seeing them taken by some government entity.”

Minimum shrinkage of assets

A goal of estate planning, he says, is to “make sure we get our assets to those we want to have them, with minimum shrinkage due to costs, taxes, or other expenses, and to do it with maximum security — to know that all the necessary documents are in force, that we’ve established a way to pay for expenses, and that we’ve tried to reduce those expenses as much as possible.”

Unfortunately, Hughes says, “Many successful farm families often do a poor job of estate planning.”

Some “extremely important” documents everyone needs include a properly drafted, valid will, a durable power of attorney, a durable power of attorney for health care, and a health care directive.

“This should involve a team of advisors: your attorney, your accountant, your estate planner, and your trust officer, if you have a trust.”

A will is important, Hughes says, to determine how property you own will pass to someone else, but it needs to be properly drawn, witnessed, and the signatures notarized.

“You need to be aware, too, that a beneficiary designation, such as for a retirement plan or life insurance, will override a designation in your will. So you need to be sure that you frequently review beneficiary designations and update them so these assets will go where you want them to go.

“If you die without a will, the state of Mississippi has one for you through its intestacy law. If you leave your estate to chance or to the state, there’s a good chance things aren’t going to turn out the way you intended. It can get very complicated — and it can become even more complicated if there are surviving minor children or grandchildren.”

While tax planning “is not as big an issue as it was two years ago,” Hughes says, “two years from now it could well be a bigger issue.

“Tax laws are constantly changing. In 2000, the estate tax exemption was $675,000. In 2001, a law was passed that Congress said would eventually wipe out the estate tax. But it was only a 10-year law, and even though the estate tax went to zero in 2010 [to the benefit of George Steinbrenner’s family], in December 2010 they passed a law to set the exemption at $5 million.

“But, that’s only for two years. If Congress fails to act before its expiration, it will revert to just $1 million in 2013.”

Hughes quoted a memo from a Jackson, Miss., law firm:

“After three months of deliberation, the Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction, the ‘Super Committee’, has failed to develop any proposals for reducing the nation’s debt. This failure perhaps increases the possibility that the estate and gift tax exemptions will return to $1 million Jan. 1, 2013 as currently scheduled. Further, Democrat Rep. Jim McDermott has introduced the Sensible Estate Tax Act of 2011. This proposed legislation would raise the estate tax rate to 55 percent and decrease the gift and estate tax exemption to $1 million as early as Jan. 2012. While the level of support for Rep. McDermott’s proposed legislation is unclear, both the introduced legislation and the Super Committee’s failure highlight the need to act now so as to take advantage of the increased gift and estate tax opportunities.”

While the McDermott bill has only been introduced and isn’t law, Hughes says, “it nevertheless shows the way some in Congress are thinking” and emphasizes the uncertainty of tax law.

The estate tax exemption today is $5 million. A wife can take her husband’s $5 million exclusion and add her own $5 million exclusion, thus protecting $10 million in assets, he says.

“But will it exist that way a year from now? Who knows? Good planning now can equal big savings later.”

About the Author(s)

Hembree Brandon

Editorial director, Farm Press

Hembree Brandon, editorial director, grew up in Mississippi and worked in public relations and edited weekly newspapers before joining Farm Press in 1973. He has served in various editorial positions with the Farm Press publications, in addition to writing about political, legislative, environmental, and regulatory issues.

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