Disclaimer Of Specific Property (2 Pages)
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Disclaimerspecificprop
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This Form is a Qualified Disclaimer under Code Section 2518. It is used to allow an heir to disclaim one or more items of property that would otherwise pass to the heir from the decedent either under the Will of the decedent or outside the Will of the decedent, such as by contract or beneficiary designation.
This Form is a Qualified Disclaimer under Code Section 2518. It is used to allow an heir to disclaim one or more items of property that would otherwise pass to the heir from the decedent either under the Will of the decedent or outside the Will of the decedent, such as by contract or beneficiary designation.
To be considered a qualified disclaimer, the document must be signed and delivered within nine months of the decedent’s date of death. The person disclaiming must not have received any benefit from the property being disclaimed, and may not direct where the disclaimed property should go. By disclaiming, the party so acting is allowing the disclaimed property to pass to the heirs next in line of succession, without being treated as having made a gift of the disclaimed property to such heirs.
In this Form, the person disclaiming is not necessarily refusing to accept all property left to him or her by the decedent; hence the references to specific items of property. A disclaimer need not be an all or nothing decision. It can be used to enhance the amount of property passing to younger generation beneficiaries, to take advantage of an available generation-skipping transfer tax exemption, to address the optimal use of the credit shelter trust at the first death of a married couple (and avoid overfunding the marital deduction), or to correct an overfunded credit shelter trust if assumed valuations of specific gifts of property were improperly estimated.
Author:
Steven G. Siegel is president of The Siegel Group, a Morristown, New Jersey - based national consulting firm specializing in tax consulting, estate planning and advising family business owners and entrepreneurs. Mr. Siegel holds a BS from Georgetown University, a JD from Harvard Law School and an LLM in Taxation from New York University.
He is the author of several books, including: Planning for An Aging Population; Business Entities: Start to Finish; Taxation of Divorce and Separation; Income Taxation of Estates and Trusts, Preparing the Audit-Proof Federal Estate Tax Return, Putting It Together: Planning Estates for $5 million and Less, Family Business Succession Planning, Business Acquisitions: Representing Buyers and Sellers in the Sale of a Business; Dynasty Trusts; Planning with Intentionally-Defective Grantor Trusts; The Federal Gift Tax: A Comprehensive Analysis; Charitable Remainder Trusts, Grantor Trust Planning: QPRTs, GRATs and SCINs, The Estate Planning Course, The Retirement Planning Course, Retirement Distributions: Estate and Tax Planning Strategies; The Estate Administration Course, Tax Strategies for Closely-Held Businesses, and Tort Litigation Settlements: Tax and Financial Issues.
Mr. Siegel has lectured extensively throughout the United States on tax, business and estate planning topics on behalf of numerous organizations, including National Law Foundation, AICPA, CCH, National Tax Institute, National Society of Accountants, and many others. He has served as an adjunct professor of law at Seton Hall and Rutgers University law schools.
The Siegel Group provides consulting services to accountants, attorneys, financial planners and life insurance professionals to assist them with the tax, estate and business planning and compliance issues confronting their clients. Based in Morristown, New Jersey, the Group has provided services throughout the United States. The Siegel Group does not sell any products. It is an entirely fee-based organization.