Pick And Choose Fractional Share Marital Deduction Formula For Use In A Revocable Trust (1 Page)

In stock
SKU
pickandchoose
$19.00

This clause is used to create a fractional share, thereby avoiding the possible gain or loss issues that can arise in the case of a pecuniary share. The “pick and choose” aspect allows the fiduciary to select assets for funding the formula share – rather than being required to allocate a proportionate share of every asset the decedent possessed to the selected formula. The “pick and choose” formula gives more discretion to the fiduciary and avoids what could be an awkward fractional titling of the decedent’s assets.

Links

This clause is used to create a fractional share, thereby avoiding the possible gain or loss issues that can arise in the case of a pecuniary share. The “pick and choose” aspect allows the fiduciary to select assets for funding the formula share – rather than being required to allocate a proportionate share of every asset the decedent possessed to the selected formula. The “pick and choose” formula gives more discretion to the fiduciary and avoids what could be an awkward fractional titling of the decedent’s assets.

Author: 
Steven G. Siegel is president of The Siegel Group, which provides consulting services to attorneys, accountants, business owners, family offices and financial planners. Based in Morristown, New Jersey, the Group provides services throughout the United States. Mr. Siegel is the author of many books, including: The Grantor Trust Answer Book (2012 and 2013 CCH); CPA’s Guide to Financial and Estate Planning (AICPA 2012); and Federal Fiduciary Income Taxation (Foxmoor 2012). In conjunction with numerous tax planning lectures he has delivered for the National Law Foundation, Mr. Siegel has prepared extensive lecture materials on the following subjects: Planning for An Aging Population; Business Entities: Start to Finish; Preparing the Audit-Proof Federal Estate Tax Return; Business Acquisitions: Representing Buyers and Sellers in the Sale of a Business; Dynasty Trusts; Planning with Intentionally-Defective Grantor Trusts, Introduction to Estate Planning; Intermediate-Sized Estate Planning; Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid: Explanation and Planning Strategies; Subchapter S Corporations: Using Trusts as Shareholders; Divorce and Separation: Important Tax Planning Issues; The Portability Election; Generation-Skipping Transfer Tax: A Comprehensive Review; and many other titles. Mr. Siegel has delivered hundreds of lectures to thousands of attendees in live venues and via webinars throughout the United States on tax, business and estate planning topics on behalf of numerous organizations, including The Heckerling Institute on Tax Planning, CCH, National Law Foundation, AICPA, Western CPE, the National Society of Accountants, the National Tax Institute, Cohn-Reznick, Professional Education Systems, Inc., Foxmoor Education, many State Accounting Societies and Estate Planning Councils as well as on behalf of private companies. He is presently serving as an adjunct professor of law in the Graduate Tax Program (LLM) of the University of Alabama, and has served as an adjunct professor of law at Seton Hall and Rutgers University law schools. Mr. Siegel holds a bachelor’s degree from Georgetown University (magna cum laude, phi beta kappa), a juris doctor from Harvard Law School and an LLM in taxation from New York University Law School.