Posts Tagged domestic asset protection trusts
Trust Experts Say Judge Made “Bad Law” in Landmark Asset Protection Case
Posted by Scott Martin in News on October 29, 2011
Last week, trust gurus from every corner sounded loud sirens to register both discontent and caution over a recent federal bankruptcy decision that could shape the future use of domestic asset protection trusts.
Lawyers around the country have been heating up the Internet fretting over whether a seemingly routine bankruptcy hearing invalidates an entire class of trusts and could leave thousands of their wealthiest clients exposed to nuisance lawsuits.
After Alaska geologist Tom Mortensen filed for bankruptcy protection on about $250,000 in debt, the credit card companies came after his 1.25-acre vacation property in the vicinity of Anchorage.
In theory, that property was held in an Alaska trust, but the bankruptcy judge overruled state statute to let Mortensen’s creditors recover anyway. Read the rest of this entry »
Don’t Count on Hawaii’s New Trust Law to Attract the Super-Rich
Posted by Jerry Cooper in News on August 21, 2010
Experts say Hawaii’s new asset protection law is “dead on arrival.” With a 1% user fee and onerous investment restrictions, few billionaires will find Hawaii a proper bastion for their family fortunes.

The economic pinch has even affected paradise. Hawaii is suffering from a decline in tourists and as a result is scrambling for new ways to bring more money to the state. Ambitious plans are underway that include the revival of the 1970s hit CBS TV show “Hawaii Five-O.”
As part of the revival initiatives, Hawaii’s trust firms and the estate planners have embarked on a bold campaign to attract the world’s super rich by making it the premier trust haven of the Pacific.
On June 28, 2010, Hawaii Governor Linda Lingle signed into law a new trust law designed to compete with Nevada, Delaware, Alaska, South Dakota and other domestic asset protection trust states by allowing local trusts to shield assets from creditors or, theoretically, the courts.
With the new law, Act 182, as ammunition, local legislators hope their state will become a powerful “sun, swim and protect” combo that entices mega-rich families who may be vacationing in paradise to leave more of their cash behind.
“We believe that trust business is very compatible with our visitor industry,” explains state senator Rosalyn “Roz” Baker, who sponsored the bill back in January.
“Yes, the rationale was to woo offshore assets to a repository in Hawaii,” she adds.
DEAD ON ARRIVAL
Even though Honolulu is optimistic that asset protection trusts will bring in revenue, estate planners do not see a credible threat to established trust centers on the mainland.
Although Act 182 puts Hawaii ahead of the 37 states that do not support asset protection trusts at all, unique twists ensure that the Aloha State will remain a poor second choice compared to other asset protection states
Under the new law, wealthy families must pay an unprecedented 1% excise tax on all money and assets they move into an asset protection trust.
Given the potential size of these accounts, this can add up to real cash for the state government—but why would anyone pay it if a few phone calls to Nevada, Delaware or South Dakota will provide the same benefits without the added charge?
“The law won’t work as intended,” says Dan Rubin, a prominent estate planning attorney with the New York firm of Moses and Singer.
“Without very bad legal advice, no smart billionaire is going to set up a trust in Hawaii even if they have a $10 million house on the beach if it requires participants to pay a 1% user fee to gain trust benefits.”
If the extra expense weren’t enough, Hawaii also restricts asset protection trusts to 25% of the grantor’s net worth—and prohibits transfers of real property into trust.
And unlike states like South Dakota or Nevada, trusts administered in Hawaii pay state income tax whether their trustees are locals or tourists.
Someone in Hawaii must have done some quick math to work out a formula for political success. According the state’s 2010 budget, Hawaii only had a $22.3 million shortfall. Therefore, if say only a few billionaires set up a handful of trusts, with a 1% excise tax, $3 billion would do the trick and generate $30 million in tax collections.
Finally, while Honolulu may hope Tiger Woods or other celebrities with contentious marriages will start flying in for sun, golf and protection, Act 182 does not shield assets from divorce—or even secured creditors.
Steve Oshins, a Nevada asset protection trust lawyer who rates asset protection trust states based on their benefits, agrees with Rubin that the new law is “dead on arrival.”
“I don’t even know if it’s got a lot of sizzle, let alone the steak,” he says. “Nobody’s going to use it.”
In fact, he gives Hawaii a failing grade where asset protection is concerned, and would be surprised if the new law will help the Aloha State carve out even 1% of the business currently dominated by Nevada, Alaska, South Dakota and Delaware.
“Laws need to be competitive with those of the Tier 1 states,” he explains. “Given the ability to forum-shop, nearly everybody from out of state uses one of these four states.”
NOT FOR TIGER WOODS…BUT WHAT ABOUT THE LOCALS?
With reviews like these, the state’s three institutions with trust powers—Bank of Hawaii, Central Pacific Bank and First Hawaiian Bank—may not win many accounts from the mainland after all.
Bank of Hawaii, far and away the biggest of the trio, does substantial trust business with locals, but so far this year its trust and asset management income has been flat or even slightly lower on a year-over-year basis.
Resident estate planners doubt that the new law will even give Hawaiian professionals and other wealthy residents an incentive to keep their assets at home.
“Now that I’ve chewed through this a bit more, I’m moderately certain we won’t use many of these,” says Hawaii-born financial planner Lesley Brey.
“I suspect that it will not be very appealing to most professionals,” agrees Honolulu estate planning attorney Ethan Okura. “I see no reason to keep marketable securities with a trustee in-state.”
In fact, Okura believes that only relatively “unsophisticated” locals will take advantage of the new ability to create an in-state asset protection trust.
“Many local Hawaii residents prefer to work with other local professionals, so perhaps there will be quite a few who utilize the new law—especially if the local banks promote it with their clients,” he says.
Dan Rubin predicts the Hawaiian legislature to wake up to Act 182’s problems and start fixing them fairly soon.
But for Hawaii to become a real national competitor, just putting asset protection on the menu is not going to be enough, Steve Oshins says.
“Because they have a state income tax, they wouldn’t have a chance,” he says. “If you had the best state law, then you can say that you’re going to charge a little more because you’re the best. But this is a mediocre law anyway.”
Perhaps the revival of the TV show Hawaii-50 may have the same good luck it did 40 years ago and attract tons of tourists to the islands. But for now, as Dan Rubin says “if this were 1997 and Hawaii introduced the first domestic asset protection statute, this law might be taken seriously.” He adds, “but this is 13 years later, and wealthy families expect a lot better.”
Jerry Cooper, senior editor, The Trust Advisor Blog. Steven Maimes and Scott Martin contributed to the research and reporting.
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Would an Asset Protection Trust Work for Tiger Woods?
Posted by Scott Martin in News on February 19, 2010
Alaska practitioner claims asset protection trusts are good advice in marital disputes. But others disagree.
If Tiger Woods is lucky, coming clean about all those affairs will help him salvage his marriage. But if he and Elin split up anyway, apologizing might at least have earned him some time to shelter his hard-won $600 million fortune from the divorce court.
Estate lawyer David Shaftel of Anchorage, Alaska says that even people who’ve been married for years can set up an asset protection trust. “We can do them after the marriage,” he told The Trust Advisor.
Community property laws can raise questions about trusts funded with marital assets without spousal consent, Shaftel says, but since Tiger lives in Florida, a non-community property state, there’s no problem. He doesn’t need his wife’s consent to fund the trust, and his wife’s lawyers would have a hard time touching his assets as long as he keeps enough cash on hand to meet the terms of the prenuptial agreement.
Once the assets are in the trust, he no longer has the keys to the safe and can tell the court that he doesn’t have access to the money. If she divorces him and can get what he’s already promised to settle on her, he’s home free. The asset protection trust did its job.
Needless to say, the public probably wouldn’t like the idea of him shielding his assets from the court using the trust. Personal finance gurus like Jean Chatzky—who loves prenuptial agreements for being less “cold-blooded”—bristle at the notion.
“When they’re used in that way, I find trusts sneaky and underhanded,” one Chatzky column warned Money readers. “A well-executed prenup or post-nup will do the same thing.”
Before the Honeymoon Even Starts
For better or worse, Tiger’s original prenup reportedly gave Elin $20 million if she stayed with him through 2014; rumor has it he’s since sweetened the deal substantially to keep her from walking out. Estate lawyers around the country say their clients who don’t want to follow in his footsteps are showing a lot of interest in asset protection trusts before walking down the aisle.
“I’ve probably set up as many asset protection trusts as I have prenuptial agreements since we had the trust option,” Bryan Howard, a founding partner of Nashville, Tennessee estate planning firm Howard & Mobley PLLC, told The Trust Advisor.
“More than half of the 20-somethings don’t do prenuptial agreements any more. Protecting these assets is just not something that occurs to young kids. But it definitely occurs to their wealthy parents.”
In fact, Howard says his clients are so enthusiastic about these trusts that they’re setting them up for the kids before that special someone is even in the picture. Unlike a traditional prenup, which requires a bride or groom to sign the papers, an asset management trust can be created early on and then filed away; even if the kids elope, the assets are safe.
This sort of preemptive divorce protection works well for Shaftel too. Since so many couples prefer not to talk about the money, getting the transaction out of the way before they’re even a couple keeps it from getting bogged down in personal issues or questions of marital consent.
Opinions vary as to whether couples need both a prenup and a trust. Howard has a belt and suspenders philosophy and recommends both types of paperwork for his clients if possible. He argues that a prenup provides a useful structure for discussions about alimony—Tennessee trusts are vulnerable if payments are delinquent—and wealth that the couple may acquire during marriage.
Alaska, Nevada and Beyond
If Tiger’s lawyers decide he needs a trust, where should they go? In most asset protection states, spouses are “exempted creditors,” which means that they can get around the protection that trusts normally provide. But in Alaska and Nevada, an ex-spouse is considered just another creditor, says Douglas Blattmachr, founder of the Alaska Trust Company.
“We’re one of the only states that I’m aware of that doesn’t have that special class of creditor,” he told me. “In Delaware, there’s a whole string of creditors that can get the assets. Same with South Dakota.”
It’s a relatively minor difference, but one that still drives some out-of-state trust traffic to Alaska, says Blattmachr, who knows the state’s statutes better than most. His brother drafted the law that opened the state up to independent trust companies in the first place.
Alaska offers confidence when it comes to estate tax treatment. As of July 15, the IRS resolved a gray area in the tax code by confirming that the state’s self-settled spendthrift trusts—the formal name for these vehicles—are in fact exempt from estate tax even though the grantor can still draw on them as needed.
Both Blattmachr and Anchorage attorney David Shaftel agree that this “sweet spot” between favorable tax treatment and accessibility in an emergency helps to create a lot of interest in Alaska-based trust structures.
“It’s become almost a default technique here,” Shaftel told me. “People are much more comfortable gifting or selling assets to the irrevocable trust if they can enjoy the psychological security of knowing they can draw on these assets if they need them.”
“Hell No!”
Another, often overlooked benefit of the trust environment in states like Alaska and Nevada where divorce planning is concerned: These trusts protect the family’s assets not just for the current generation, but for centuries. In other words, even if the kids or grandkids make a terrible match, the trust remains secure.
“In the estate planning field, the creditor the older generation is most concerned about is the ex-spouse if a child gets divorced,” Shaftel said. “Is that inheritance going to be divorced and given to the ex? That’s a very high driver of interest.”
Blattmachr sees this too. “That one-in-two chance that a couple will get divorced applies to future generations as well. Do you want your ex-son-in-law to get your assets? Whenever I ask a couple that, they say ‘Hell no!’ Whatever happens with the estate tax, that ‘Hell no’ will be with us always.”
Tiger’s kids aren’t old enough to worry about, but with $600 million on the line, it’s a good bet the family lawyers are at least thinking that far ahead.
Scott Martin, contributing editor, The Trust Advisor Blog. Steven Maimes contributed to the research and editing.
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