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Phone: (408) 553-0801 | Fax: (408) 553-0807 | Email: contact@lpeplaw.com
LONICH PATTON EHRLICH POLICASTRI
Phone: (408) 553-0801
Fax: (408) 553-0807
Email: contact@lpeplaw.com
1871 The Alameda, Suite 400
San Jose, CA 95126
Located in San Jose, Lonich Patton Ehrlich Policastri handles matters for clients in northern California, specifically San Jose and Silicon Valley. Our services are available to anyone within the following counties: Santa Clara, San Mateo, Contra Costa, Santa Cruz, Monterey, San Benito, and San Francisco. For a full listing of areas where we practice, please click here.
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Update: Gifts to Caregivers Prohibited
/in Estate Planning /by Michael LonichRecall that gifts to caregivers are generally prohibited by law under California Probate Code section 21350. (See blog: Gifts to Caregivers Prohibited noting what activities constitute “caregiving”). However, section 21351, enumerates several exceptions to this general rule. One of the exceptions—found in Section 21351(a)—provides that section 21350 does not apply if the transferor is related by blood or marriage to, is a cohabitant with, or is registered as a domestic partner of the transferee. Cal. Prob. Code § 21351(a) (West). The issue in a recent California case was whether this provision applied to a stepdaughter by marriage.
In Hernandez v. Kieferle (October 31, 2011), the Second Appellate District of California reviewed a probate court decision which invalidated an amendment to a trust designating stepdaughter Claudine Kieferle as the trustee and sole beneficiary of her stepmother Gertrude’s estate. The designated beneficiary of a prior amendment, Gertrude’s next-door neighbor Florentina Hernandez, challenged the validity of the second amendment removing her as the trustee and principal beneficiary of the estate. The probate court found for Florentina noting that section 21350 established a presumption that transfers to care custodians are the product of fraud, duress, menace, or undue influence and, since Claudine lived with Gertrude and cared for her in the evenings, Claudine was disqualified from taking under the trust.
In reviewing the lower court ruling, however, the Appellate Court reversed this decision and concluded that it was an error not to apply the exception found in section 21351(a). The Court rejected the argument that the exception did not apply to Claudine because she was not an “heir”—where her stepmother’s estate did not actually contain property attributable to her father (who passed away eleven years prior)—and found that a person is the transferor’s heir if some intestate rule identifies the person as the transferor’s successor, regardless of whether the transferor’s estate includes the type of property distributed under the rule. Therefore, the section 21351 exception applied and the second amendment was deemed valid allowing Claudine to remain as the trustee and sole beneficiary of Gertrude’s estate.
If you are interested in learning more about making amendments to a trust or creating an estate plan, please contact the San Jose estate planning attorneys at Lonich Patton Erlich Policastri, LLP. Please remember that each individual situation is unique and results discussed in this post are not a guarantee of future results. While this post may include legal issues, it is not legal advice. Use of this site does not create an attorney-client relationship.
2011 Tax Laws Affecting the Inheritance of Real Property
/in Estate Planning /by Michael LonichIn 2010, the Tax Relief, Unemployment Insurance Reauthorization, and Job Creation Act (Tax Relief Act) of 2010 extended the sunset of the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 (EGTRRA) for two years through 2012. For those who may be inheriting real property in 2011, it is important to note that the “step up in basis” rules will remain through 2012.
In order to adequately explain what this concept entails, here is an example from the Wall Street Journal:
Suppose your Uncle Joe died earlier this year and left you some valuable stocks, bonds and other items. Those assets have risen in value over the years. You’re thinking of selling them to buy a new home or to invest in something else. How would you figure out your tax cost for capital-gains tax purposes?
Typically, your tax cost is the fair market value of the assets on the date your uncle died — or, in certain cases, their value six months later. That means you don’t have to worry about figuring out what Uncle Joe originally paid for them. You don’t have to rummage through his old records or search the Web.
All that should matter is their fair market value on the date he died (or, in certain cases, six months later). This is known as “step up in basis” because your tax basis on those appreciated assets typically gets stepped up to the date-of-death value.
The General Basis Increase (the sum of the aggregate basis increases) is the maximum allotted amount the Tax Code will allow to be “stepped up.” The EGTRRA of 2001 preserved the step up in basis for up to $1.3 million dollars (plus an additional $3 million for assets given to a spouse) through 2010. Then the Tax Relief Act of 2010 extended the EGTRRA to 2012. Thus, the General Basis Increase for 2011 will remain at $1.3 million, and if assets are given to a spouse, up to $4.3 million. Therefore, if the value of assets inherited totals more than $1.3 million, assets beyond that sum will not be “stepped up.”
While creating an estate plan, it is always important to consider tax consequences on the estate, any named beneficiaries, and the planner himself. Any named beneficiaries who have an interest in real property should also be aware of the taxes they will be responsible for after inheriting real property. The Tax Code is intimidating and daunting; however, the Estate Planning Attorneys at Lonich Patton Erlich Policastri can help clarify the process. If you are interested in learning more about taxes on your estate plan or how you may be affected by receiving an inheritance, please contact the experienced estate planning attorneys at Lonich Patton Erlich Policastri for further information. Please remember that each individual situation is unique and results discussed in this post are not a guarantee of future results. While this post may include legal issues, it is not legal advice. Use of this site does not create an attorney-client relationship.
Gifts to Caregivers Prohibited
/in Estate Planning /by Michael LonichAn estate plan may be created to do almost anything a person desires. For example, a will can distribute the decedent’s personal and/or real property; passing on specific items to a relative, friend, or organization. A trust can hold specific property or funds for a designated beneficiary; any and all terms of which may be determined by the trustor. While drafting these estate planning documents, it’s important to keep in mind restrictions that state laws impose on to whom transfers can be made. In California, an important restriction is outlined in Probate Code section 21350.
Section 21350 outlines California’s limitations on transfers to “drafters, care custodians, and others.” Specifically, provisions that make donative transfers (i.e. gifts) to (1) the person who drafted the instrument, (2) any person who has a fiduciary relationship with the transferor, or (3) a care custodian, among others, are strictly prohibited. Despite the statute’s clear restrictions, there have been issues relating to who exactly qualifies under these categories. In Estate of Austin, 188 Cal. App. 4th 512 (2010), the Fifth District California Court of Appeal needed to decide whether a former stepdaughter should be considered a “care custodian” under the statute and thus disqualified from receiving gifts. The former stepdaughter took her former stepfather to his doctor appointments, prepared meals for him, and helped out whenever she could after he broke his hip and while he recovered from triple bypass surgery. Decedent’s daughter filed a lawsuit seeking to disqualify her former stepsister from receiving gift transfers totaling about $185,000.
Earlier in the case, the Fresno County Superior Court ruled that the gifts to the former stepdaughter were valid. The Appellate Court affirmed. A care custodian is defined by California case law as someone who provides care or services to elders or dependent adults, whether paid or as a result of preexisting personal friendship. Health or social services were defined as including cooking, gardening, running errands, assisting with banking, and driving to doctor’s appointments. The Appellate Court found that the former stepdaughter’s “services” could not be reasonably characterized as providing substantial, ongoing health or social services and she was thus not a care custodian. Further, the decedent made the gift transfers to the former stepdaughter while he was residing in a nursing home, when the former stepdaughter was not providing any services to him. Therefore, the gift transfers were valid and the former stepdaughter was not disqualified from receiving them.
Statutes do not always clearly define who falls into certain categories, the courts are able to make decisions based on specific factual scenarios. If you care for an elder relative and think you may be considered a care custodian, an attorney can help clarify what, if any, impact this may have on your ability to inherit from that relative. If you are interested in learning more about individual gift transfers or estate planning, please contact the San Jose estate planning attorneys at Lonich Patton Erlich Policastri, LLP. Please remember that each individual situation is unique and results discussed in this post are not a guarantee of future results. While this post may include legal issues, it is not legal advice. Use of this site does not create an attorney-client relationship.
No-Contest Clauses in Trusts
/in Estate Planning /by Michael LonichTrusts are incredibly useful estate planning instruments (see Testamentary versus Inter Vivos Trusts blog). They can be drafted and administered in almost any way you want; they can even protect your heirs’ inheritance from creditors (see Spendthrift Clauses blog). Another useful way to ensure that your estate is administered in a particular way is to include a “no-contest” clause in your estate planning documents.
A no-contest clause is a “provision in an otherwise valid instrument that, if enforced, would penalize a beneficiary for filing a pleading in any court.” California Probate Code sections 21310-23315 govern these provisions and define a contest as a “pleading filed with the court by a beneficiary that would result in a penalty under a no-contest clause, if the no contest clause is enforced.” The Probate Code also defines a “direct” contest, which, if brought with probable cause (as defined by statute) does not violate the no-contest clause.
Direct contests allege the invalidity of a protected instrument or one or more of its terms based on forgery; lack of due execution; lack of capacity; menace, duress, fraud, or undue influence; revocation of a will by statute; and/or disqualification of a beneficiary by statute. However, it is important to note that a no-contest clause will only protect the instrument containing the no-contest clause and other instruments only if they were already in existence and expressly identified in the no-contest clause. Accordingly, it is important to consult an experienced estate planning attorney to ensure your estate is protected from contests.
If you are interested in learning more about estate planning and protecting the administration of your estate, contact the San Jose estate planning attorneys at Lonich Patton Erlich Policastri, LLP. Please remember that each individual situation is unique and results discussed in this post are not a guarantee of future results. While this post may include legal issues, it is not legal advice. Use of this site does not create an attorney-client relationship.
California Enforcement of Out-of-State Support Orders
/1 Comment/in Family Law /by David PattonIf a child support order is obtained in another state and the custodial parent and child move to California, there are a few steps that need to be taken to enforce the out-of-state order.
All fifty states have adopted the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act (UIFSA). The UIFSA governs when more than one state is involved in cases establishing, enforcing, or modifying child or spousal support orders. The UIFSA helps to determine the jurisdiction and power of the courts in different states and establishes which state’s laws will be applied in the proceedings.
California’s version is codified in California Family Code section 4900 et al., which outlines the general procedures for enforcing support orders or income-withholding orders issued by another state. Specified documents must be submitted to the California tribunal to register the order. Then, the registered order is enforceable in the same manner and subject to the same procedure as an order issued by California. It becomes a California judgment for any arrearages and subject to the same defenses as any other judgment. Although California lacks jurisdiction to reduce or modify the support arrearages, it has the discretion to determine the manner in which the judgment will be enforced.
The Certified Family Law Specialists* at Lonich Patton Erlich Policastri have decades of experience handling complex and heavily disputed interstate child and spousal support enforcement issues. If you have a child or spousal support enforcement issue, please contact the Certified Family Law Specialists* at Lonich Patton Erlich Policastri, who can provide you with an in depth analysis regarding your case. Please remember that each individual situation is unique and results discussed in this post are not a guarantee of future results. While this post may include legal issues, it is not legal advice. Use of this site does not create an attorney-client relationship.
*Certified Family Law Specialist, The State Bar of California Board of Legal Specialization