• IRC 199A – Planning to Achieve the Deduction

    Take-Away: Prior to the publication of the anti-abuse Final IRC 199A Regulations last summer, one planning idea was for a Specified Services Trades or Businesses (SSTB), i.e. a professional practice,  to ‘break-off’ a feature or aspect of the professional’s business into a separate business entity, e.g. create a separate billing business apart from the professional’s […]

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  • Identifying the Trust Settlor – Why It is Important

    Take-Away: At common law, any person who contributes assets to an irrevocable trust can be treated as a settlor of that trust. A self-settled trust can have its assets taken to satisfy the settlor’s creditor claims. The Michigan Trust Code provides a different definition of trust settlor, which helps to protect trust assets from a […]

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  • Taxable Income Even When the Check is Not Cashed

    Take-Away: The IRS confirms that the failure to cash a distribution check from a qualified plan is still included in the participant’s taxable income for the year, including automatic withholding of income taxes. Background: The Tax Code provides that any amount actually distributed to a distributee by an employees’ trust [IRC 401a], which trust is […]

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  • Specific and General Devises – the Rule of Abatement

    Take-Away: A testator possesses the right to leave his or her property by Will. However, the rights of the beneficiaries to the testator’s property are subject to the restrictions and limitations of EPIC which are intended to facilitate the prompt settlement of the decedent’s estate and its administration, including the payment of the decedent’s debts. […]

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  • Vehicle Titling

    Take-Away: When dealing with vehicle and boat titles, it is a good idea to not hold title to the vehicle in the joint name of spouses. Rather, the title to the vehicle should be held in the name of the person who most frequently operates the vehicle. This title holding is for liability protection purposes. […]

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  • Year of Death RMDs – Change on the Horizon

    Take-Away: Questions always seem to come up with regard to proper way to handle a decedent’s required minimum distribution (RMD) in the year of his or her death. Three basic rules with regard to these retirement plan distributions should be kept in mind. Rule #1- RMD Only if the Decedent was Beyond the Required Beginning Date: The […]

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  • Tax and Asset Protection Planning with Non-grantor Trusts

    Take-Away: Estate planning with the use of grantor trusts receives a lot of attention these days. The benefit of using a non-grantor trust are often overshadowed by grantor trusts for moderately wealthy individuals, yet in many cases taxes can be saved with the use of a non-grantor trust. Background: A non-grantor trust is taxed as a separate legal entity, unlike a grantor […]

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  • Trustee is Not an Agent of the Trust Beneficiary

    Take-Away: Some trust beneficiaries look at their trustee as their agent who is required to respond to the beneficiary’s directions. A federal appeals court in California recently disagreed that a trustee serves in an agency capacity with regard to the trust’s beneficiaries. Case: Banks v. Northern Trust Corp, 929 F.3d 1046 (2019) Issue: The facts […]

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  • Trustee has Standing to Enforce Charitable Trust

    Take-Away: As a broad generalization, when a charitable trust is created, the belief is that only the Attorney General can bring a lawsuit to enforce that charitable trust. The Michigan Court of Appeals just held that the trustee of the decedent’s trust who distributed the assets to the university for charitable purposes could sue the […]

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  • Testator’s Oral Statements Not Binding- Elements of a Gift

    Take-Away: A recent Michigan Court of Appeals decision effectively ‘punished’ a son who claimed that he was following his deceased father’s directions. The son made a gift when he testified that he was carrying out his father’s testamentary direction. From the fact, however, I am not sure we should feel sorry for the son. Case: […]

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