Adventures in dying: The journey of a Law ClerkBy Cynthia K. HagemeyerJune 2007I first became fascinated, or rather disgusted, with estate litigation when my grandmother’s estate became the subject of a heated will contest.
Another Health Care Power of Attorney: Mental Health Treatment Preference DeclarationBy Donna L. MooreJune 2007The Power of Attorney for Property, Power of Attorney for Health Care and Living Will are familiar Advanced Directives. The Mental Health Treatment Preference Declaration (“Declaration”) is another Advanced Directive designed to capture the mental health treatment preferences of a client.
The delayed QTIP: The Illinois Wait-n-SeeBy Katarinna McBrideDecember 2007After several frustrating and failed attempts to combine efforts with the Attorney General to structure legislation, the ISBA Trusts & Estates Section Council is taking the initiative to propose legislation amending 35 ILCS 405/2 of the Illinois Compiled Statutes.
The departed and divorcedBy Katarinna McBrideMarch 2007Which is legally more complicated, death during a divorce or death after a divorce?
Estate tax update: Estate tax reform proposalsBy Gregg M. SimonOctober 2007On March 21, 2007, while the Senate was considering the fiscal 2008 budget resolution (S. Con. Res. 21), Congress hinted that it just may take up estate tax reform.
Here we go ‘round the Rosen bush—An FLP roadmapBy Richard A. SugarMarch 2007The Rosen case sets out one of the best roadmaps for how to avoid the failure of family limited partnerships as governed by Section 2036(a)(1).
IRS still not charitably driven when clients steer IRAs to trustsBy Michael CyrsMarch 2007The Internal Revenue Service is still a miser when it comes to trusts and individual retirement accounts. In a recent internal legal memorandum (Internal Legal Memorandum 200644020 “ILM”) the Internal Revenue Service (“Service”) concluded that a transfer of an individual retirement account (“IRA”) to charity to satisfy a legacy from a trust was taxable to the trust as income in respect of the decedent under Internal Revenue Code Section 691(a)(2).
Legislative Update: Section success and opportunity in the 95th SessionBy Ray J. Koenig, IIIJune 2007During the 95th session of the Illinois General Assembly, the Trusts and Estates Section Council monitored nineteen (19) pieces of proposed legislation impacting our area of practice.
A lesson in discretion: Leona Helmsley’s last will and testamentBy Katarinna McBrideOctober 2007Many clients regard the content of their wills to be a private matter. Unfortunately, state law often requires that wills be recorded, and therefore open to public inspection by the media, creditors, distant relatives—essentially anyone.
Major “Kiddie Tax” changesBy Edward J. FellinSeptember 2007The Small Business and Work Community Tax Act of 2007 extends the reach of “Kiddie Tax” that is imposed on the investment income of minor children.
MCLE credit and newsletter authorsSeptember 2007According to Rule 795(d)(7) of the Supreme Court of Illinois’ Minimum Continuing Legal Education Rules, authors who write “law-related articles in responsible legal journals or other legal sources” can get MCLE credit.
MinutesBy Ray J. Koenig, III & Amy Jo SmithDecember 2007Mike Wiedel reported that the basic LawEd program on Estate Planning for Modest Estates will be held on October 26th at NIU in Rockford and on November 2nd at Eastland Suites in Bloomington.
Regulating the acronyms: GRAT, GRUT, QPRT, CRAT and CRUTBy Gregg M. SimonOctober 2007The IRS proposed rules for determining the extent to which a trust in which the grantor has retained the use of property or the right to an annuity, unitrust, or other income payment for life, for any period not ascertainable without reference to the Grantor’s death, or for a period that does not in fact end before the Grantor’s death, is includible in the Grantor’s gross estate under IRC §2036. Prop. Reg. §20.2036-1, Prop. Reg §20.2039-1.
Stranger than fiction: The Illinois Attorney General wants trustees to WHAT!By Mary CascinoJune 2007Under the Charitable Trust Act, 760 ILCS 55/1 et.al., the Attorney General requires an estate representative or a trustee of a trust to notify the Attorney General of charitable bequests in excess of $4,000. Failure to comply with the notice requirements could result in a fine ranging from $500 to $1,000 to be levied against the estate or trust.
What a difference a day makes: Estate of Frazier Jelke IIIBy Katarinna McBrideDecember 2007In a case of first impression, and reversing the Tax Court, the Eleventh Circuit in Estate of Frazier Jelke III held that in determining the estate tax value of company stock, the company’s value is reduced by the entire built-in capital gain as of the date of death.