Living Trusts Protect Financial Privacy
by Bill Rounds
How to Vanish
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We Are All
Going To Die!
Someday
When we die
the court system will take control of our financial lives and make
one of the most private aspects of our lives public.
This loss of financial privacy will happen unless we take one simple
step to protect ourselves, our assets and our families with a living
trust.
Probate
is the Problem With Financial Privacy
When people
die they leave behind some stuff (hopefully). Most people have a
will, if they have anything at all, to determine who gets all of
their neat stuff. To administer this process, for people who do
or do not have a will, the courts take control of all the assets,
make sure all the money goes to the right people, and make your
will a part of the public record. This is called probate.
Anyone particularly interested in learning what your kids got will
be able to find out very easily. Some courts even make the information
available online. This is a huge blow to financial privacy.
Living Trust
The only way
to avoid having so much of your private financial life displayed
for the public is to prepare a living
trust. A living trust allows you to maintain control over your
assets while you are alive, avoids the public probate process to
distribute assets when you die and maintains your financial privacy.
There are some
other great benefits as well. Compared to the cost of administering
a living trust, probate is expensive. The cost is based on the value
of the assets that the probate court deals with, so the more money
you have, the more it will cost you. Probate is also slower.
Dont
Get Hit By A Bus
What happens
in the unfortunate event that you are hit by a bus and turned into
a vegetable?
Whether or not you have a will, your assets are going to sit around
and cant be touched. They cant be used to pay your medical
expenses, they cant be used to pay your mortgage, they cant
be used to pay for the groceries of your stalwart spouse. This can
pose a very bad problem when assets exist to pay those costs, but
you are incapacitated, covered in bandages and unable to get at
those assets.
With a living
trust, the unfortunate bus incident will not leave your assets untouchable
until you die. The trustee can use the assets to pay for expenses
while you are still alive but unable to manage your own affairs.
This makes sure that the family members who are diligently at your
hospital bed side can pay for the things they need, hopefully balloons
and get well cards.
Living Trusts
Are Common
The cost of
having a basic living trust prepared is relative to its complexity.
If your financial situation is simple, they can be quite inexpensive.
If your financial situation is more complex, it will be worth the
cost and effort to draft an adequate living trust. Many attorneys
are able to prepare them and make sure they are properly funded.
Conclusion
The legal system
still contains several tools that help ordinary individuals protect
their financial privacy. Having a living will is one of the great
ways to take advantage of that system. Living wills provide a private
alternative, to public indignity. Check out the book How
To Vanish for more legal tools to help protect your privacy.
Reprinted
with permission from How to
Vanish.
April
2, 2012
Bill
Rounds, J.D. is a California attorney. He holds a degree in Accounting
from the University of Utah and a law degree from California
Western School of Law. He practices civil litigation, domestic
and foreign business entity formation and transactions, criminal
defense and privacy law. He is a strong advocate of personal and
financial freedom and civil liberties.
Copyright
© 2012 How
to Vanish
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