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Upstate Estate Law, P.C. Blog

Greenville Estate Lawyer: “Court of Appeals Decides Constructive Trust Appeal”

January 22, 2010

In McDaniel v. Kendrick, Op. No. 4643 (S.C. Ct. App. filed December 31, 2009), the South Carolina Court of Appeals decided a real estate dispute with a tangential relationship to estate planning. Oftentimes, a mom or dad will decide as part of their estate planning to transfer a home to a child as a gift, with the expectation that the parent would continue to reside in the home for the rest otheir lives. This might be done for medicaid qualification purposes (assuming medicaid is not expected to be necessary for at least five years), or estate tax purposes. What happens however is the relationship between parent and child or parent and spouse of child deteriorates, and the parent is evicted from the home.

There is an equitable legal doctrine known as a constructive trust that could come to the parent’s rescue in the above situation. While the McDaniel case did not concern a home transfer for the purpose of estate planning, it involved Click here to finish this post.

Filed under: Legal Posts, Trusts

Posted By: Christopher Miller

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Greenville Estate Lawyer: “Beware the joint tenancy”

January 19, 2010

First installment of Do-it-Yourself estate planning disasters.  Client X has three children named High, Dry, and Helpful, and no surviving spouse. Helpful is so named because she is so very helpful in caring for mom.

So helpful in fact, that Helpful moved in with mother a few years before mom’s death to take care of her, oh, and she Click here to finish this post.

Filed under: Estate Planning, Legal Posts

Posted By: Christopher Miller

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Greenville Estate Attorney- “Let’s Discuss DIY Disasters”

January 18, 2010

Here’s a new blog category.  I am going to attempt to collect examples of Do-It-Yourself estate plans that have led to disastrous results. I think that the internet age has led to a boom for do-it-yourselfers in many fields, and this of course includes estate planning. With Google and Legal Zoom at your finger tips, what could possibly go wrong? My guess would be inadvertantly disinheriting loved ones and astronomical litigation fees, but let’s see if we can find out for sure. Stay tuned.  

Filed under: Estate Planning, Legal Posts

Posted By: Christopher Miller

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Greenville Estate Lawyer: “For A New Year – Have Your Estate Plan Checked”

If you have read any of my previous posts, surely you know that there is no federal estate tax in the year 2010.  Unsurprisingly, this change in the law can have severe repercussions for your estate plan.

Some estate planners are sounding the alarm with regard to estate plans based on credit shelter family trusts and marital deduction trusts.  These trusts are set up in such a way that the credit shelter trust gets funded with assets up to the amount that will not be subject to estate tax due to the previously existing estate tax exemption, while the marital deduction trust gets everything else.  (This set up eliminates all federal estate tax when the first spouse passes away.)

The problem with this set up is that Click here to finish this post.

Filed under: Estate Planning, Legal Posts

Posted By: Christopher Miller

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Greenville Estate Lawyer: “‘Tis the Season”

January 16, 2010

The 2009 tax season is fast approaching! It’s the year 2010. No federal estate tax! No generation skipping transfer tax! We think. Maybe. Maybe not. We’ll see. One thing that is certain is that there is a federal income tax this year. In honor of tax season, I have created a new blog category, where I will provide some advice or hints on some common errors made in tax preparation. Quick post for now, til next time, ’tis the season!

Filed under: Legal Posts

Posted By: Christopher Miller

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