Thursday, December 17, 2009

Congress Finds Time to Subpoena White House Party Crashers, but No Time to Enact Estate Tax Reform

I feel safer knowing that Congress plans to subpoena the aspiring reality-tv stars who "crashed" a White House party. http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politics/2009/12/09/2009-12-09_subpoenas_for_crashers.html

And inquiring into the fairness of the college football Bowl Championship Series (BCS) is a subject of grave national interest that obviously requires immediate Congressional attention. http://www.newser.com/story/75809/house-panel-kill-colleges-bcs-system.html

Fast action in times of crisis -- that's what I look for in the legislative leaders of my country.

I'm sure that these pressing items are the reason that Congress most likely will not find time to pass estate tax reform before January 1, 2010. http://online.wsj.com/article/SB126098351451293981.html

As you may remember, on January 1, 2010, the estate tax goes away. This sounds like great news, doesn't it? US citizens can step back and enjoy this culmination of a decade of constant change in the estate tax laws.

Don't get too comfortable, however.

First, the capital gains tax rules also change effective January 1, 2010. This means that (with exceptions), instead of inheriting assets with a basis of fair market value at the date of death of the person who left you the wealth, you will inherit the assets with the basis of the person who died.

For example, let's say that Aunt Tilly died and left you a share of stock that is trading on the NYSE for $105. You sell the stock for $105. How much would you pay in capital gains tax on that sale? If Aunt Tilly died on December 1, 2009, the answer would be zero. You inherited the stock with a basis equal to the fair market value on Aunt Tilly's death, and you sold it for the same amount. $105 - $105 = $0 capital gain. $0 x 15% capital gains tax rate = $0.

However, if Aunt Tilly dies on January 1, 2010, your capital gain tax depends on what Aunt Tilly paid for the stock. Let's say that Aunt Tilly bought the stock in 1978 and paid $5 for it. Your capital gain would be $105 minus $5 equals $100. At the 15% long-term capital gains tax rate, you would pay $15 in capital gains tax on the sale of this asset.

Big deal, you think? A 15% capital gains tax is much less than a 55% estate tax, isn't it? Not so fast there, cowgirl. Remember that anyone who inherits an asset is subject to the capital gains tax on the sale of that asset, but only people of a certain wealth are subject to estate tax. Also, how will you know what Aunt Tilly paid for that share of stock and when she bought it? What if Aunt Tilly left you a diamond earrings worth $5,000? Or improved real estate worth $200,000? How will you know how much she paid for these assets? The burden is on the person who inherits the asset to prove to the IRS what Aunt Tilly's basis was. If you can't prove Aunt Tilly's basis? The IRS presumes the basis to be zero. $200,000 minus $0 = $200,000 x 15% = $30,000.

Didn't we go through this in the 1970s and it was such a pile of hot mess that it was repealed by Congress? Tax professionals were thwarted in their efforts to calculate a taxpayer's tax liability to the point of impossibility of performance. No one could figure out Aunt Tilly's basis in anything.

Second, the repeal of the estate tax is only for twelve months. On January 1, 2011, the estate tax comes roaring back at 55% for every dollar over $1 million in wealth transferred at death.

I don't know about you, but a lot of my clients are worth more than $1 million dollars. They don't consider themselves to be wealthy, and frankly, neither do I. Let's take a couple who has been married for sixty years. There is a $300,000 life insurance policy on the husband and also on the wife. Their home, bought for $40,000 in 1962, now is worth $200,000. They have retirement savings of $300,000. This couple is worth $1.1 million -- and at the second death, $55,000 will go to the IRS and not to the children.

Sure, I can do fancy estate planning for this couple, split their wealth in half, protect half at the first death, and the remainder at the second death, and thus shelter all of their wealth from estate tax. But this couple doesn't feel they need sophisticated tax planning, and can't fathom splitting assets they have owned together for sixty years. They barely need an estate plan! The life insurance policies and retirement savings have beneficiary designation forms and pass outside probate, and the homestead passes to the children under Florida law.

But for the estate tax, this couple could have a very simple, inexpensive estate plan. However, due to the 2011 estate tax rules, this couple should pay far more than they wish to me to prepare an estate plan they do not prefer, to avoid an estate tax they don't feel they should be subject to in the first place.

Finally, the earliest estate tax returns for people who die in 2010 would be due on September 1, 2010. Congress has gotten very comfortable in passing tax laws that are retroactive. This means that Congress could pass as late as August legislation that affects the estate taxation of someone who died in January. Tax practitioners and their clients will be traversing unstable terrain, with no certainty as to what the tax liability of someone who dies in the early months of 2010 actually will be.

I'm an attorney and a CPA and I have six college degrees. If this tax situation baffles me, how am I supposed to explain it to my clients? Happy Holidays to you, Congress.

Merrell Bailey, Esq., CPA*, MBA, MSTaxation, MSAccounting
Bailey Zobel Pilcher


(*inactive license, Alabama)

Thursday, December 3, 2009

$3.5 million, 45% estate tax passes House

Gossip on Capitol Hill:

We’re getting word that by a vote of 225-200 the House has just passed H.R. 4154, which would make “permanent” the current $3.5 million exemption and 45% maximum estate tax rate

Merrell Bailey

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

17 broken coffee pots in the garage

I loved this article about a Marietta, Ohio Goodwill store that found $1,500 of marijuana hidden inside a large galvanized metal water jug they had received as a donation.

http://tinyurl.com/ygw6c5k

At Bailey Zobel Pilcher, our clients often find themselves having to clean out the home of elderly loved ones. This is a daunting task, fraught with emotion, and usually occurs in a time of crisis. It took my brother and my husband thirteen weeks, two days a week, eight hours a day, to clean out my parents' house when my parents moved into assisted living. I couldn't even go inside. The amount of "stuff" was overwhelming to me. For example, in the garage, which was stuffed to the ceiling, there were 17 broken coffee pots and 12 broken telephones. My Dad was sure that the next coffee pot or telephone that broke could be fixed with a part from a previous one.

When my Aunt Dorothy moved out of her apartment in Jersey City into a nursing home, my brothers found an entire closet full of tubes of toothpaste, brand new, in the box. Many of the tubes were so old they had petrified. Depression babies...

How do you know what to keep? What to throw away? Are your siblings fighting about the contents? Being snide about who is taking what and bringing up that "Mom always did love you more?" Claiming that "Dad told me he wanted me to have that?" It becomes very attractive to want to just throw everything away.

If cleaning out your parents' home becomes overwhelming, know that there are companies that specialize in doing this for you. They do not have years of family dynamics invested in the teacup collection. They know what is valuable and what is not. They have the patience and ability to sell the china and silverware and Lladros that no one in the family wants. We help our clients by giving them referrals to companies such as Creating Divine Order.

We also counsel our clients to pay attention when they are in this situation. Look in the pockets of the clothes and old purses for money. Stick your fingers down the toes of the boots for jewelry. Flip through the books and magazines to see if bearer bonds or stock certificates have been hidden between the pages. Many people stash valuables in the most perplexing places -- such as this galvanized metal water jug donated to Goodwill.

I learned this as a child. My godmother, my father's aunt, lived in New Jersey during the Northeast Blackout of 1965. She was away from her home visiting her second cousin in Bergen County during the power outage. When she returned home several days later, she found that her neighbors, to be helpful, had cleaned out her freezer and refrigerator, and thrown away the spoiled contents. My great-aunt fainted -- she had frozen her jewelry inside ground beef , which she kept in the freezer. When she wanted to wear her jewelry, she would take the ground beef out a couple of days before the event to thaw. Everyone knew this -- except these neighbors. The meat -- and the jewelry -- was gone.

Merrell Bailey

Tuesday, November 24, 2009

A Law Firm is a Business

With five business degrees, a CPA certification, and nearly two decades of business experience under my belt before I started practicing solely as an attorney, it never occurred to me that many people -- many lawyers -- do not consider a law firm to be a business. Yes, attorneys are members of a profession, and a law firm is a professional practice... but a law firm is a business with employees, and payroll, and taxes, and billing, and cash flow issues, just like any other business.

I'm on a mission to help other lawyers streamline their business practices. Please take a look at my most recent article, "Consistent and Current Cash Flow," published in The Florida Law Practice LINK, a publication of The Florida Bar.

http://www.yourcaringlawfirm.com/resources/merrellbaileyGPFall092page.pdf

I am happy to answer questions about how we design our procedures at Bailey Zobel Pilcher to enhance our client's experience. The better our business runs, the better we may provide legal advice to our clients. This helps us to to be...

Merrell Bailey