4 minute read

Wills, Trusts, and More Steps for Handling An Inheritance

Of all the money that may pass through your hands during your lifetime, none is more emotion-laden than an inheritance. After all, you got it because somebody died. If the inheritance was unexpected, or large compared to your lifestyle, before you spend it, evaluate your situation:

1. Figure out exactly what you have and what you're owed.

Advertisement

Typically, you don't just receive a check from the administrator of the estate; you get bits and pieces of different investments. Usually, you get a "stepped-up basis," meaning that the cost-basis of the assets are determined as of the date of death. So even if your father bought stock in IBM when it was $5 a share, if it was worth $125 a share when he died (and after multiple stock splits), your cost basis is $125. If you sell the stock at $130 a share, your capital gain is only $5. You also won't necessarily get all of the assets at the same time. Getting bits and pieces of your inheritance at different times is confusing, and it makes figuring out what you have all the more difficult. But you must know how much your inheritance is, how it is invested

by Jeffery J. McKenna

and what the cost basis is to make good decisions.

2. Make a list of your short-term and long-term goals.

Assign dollar amounts to each goal and then compare your inheritance with how much you'll need to meet your goals. When you inherit money, it is very tempting to spend it on short-term goals such as remodeling the kitchen or buying a new car. However, many of us are going to have difficulty meeting our long-term goals such as retirement and education for our children, and an inheritance may be the only way we can achieve them. Write down those long-term goals next to the short-term ones.

3. Decide how much you're going to splurge

If you know that you can meet your long-term goals, you can set aside money for short term goals, like that new car. Set up a separate bank account for this money, and when it's gone, that's it—no dipping into the rest of the inheritance.

4. Set aside three to six months' worth of your regular expenses in an emergency fund

If you don't already have an emergency fund, this is important. Emergency fund money could be put in a short-term, fixedincome investment such as a money-market account.

5. Establish an investment strategy for your long-term goals

The rest of your inheritance is your long-term goal money and, if you're fortunate, it will go a long way to make up much of

Taxi Passenger

A taxi passenger tapped the driver on the shoulder to ask him a question.

Rain

PANGUITCH OFFICE AT 46 NORTH MAIN STREET TO SERVE CLIENTS IN AND AROUND GARFIELD COUNTY.

Jeffery J. McKenna is a local attorney whose practice has been focused on Estate Planning for over 20 years. He is licensed and serves clients in Utah, Arizona and Nevada. He is a shareholder at the law firm of Barney, McKenna and Olmstead. If you have questions you would like addressed in these articles, please feel free to contact him at 435 628-1711 or jmckenna@barney-mckenna.com or visit the firm’s website at WWW.BARNEYMCKENNA.COM, he would enjoy hearing from you.

any shortfall you would otherwise have.

6. Set up your own Estate Plan

If you do not already have one, set up your own estate plan. This is crucial to ensure that your heirs receive their inheritance without having it diminished by unnecessary expenses, taxes and delays. A good estate planning attorney can help to answer questions about all of the above, and give good solid advice on the best way to pass your assets to others, given your individual set of circumstances.

The driver screamed, lost control of the car, nearly hit a bus, went up on the footpath, and stopped inches from a shop window.

For a second, everything was quiet in the cab. Then the driver said, "Look, mate, don't ever do that again. You scared the living daylights out of me!"

The passenger apologized and said, "I didn't realize that a little tap would scare you so much."

The driver replied, "Sorry, it's not really your fault. Today is my first day as a cab driver — I've been driving a funeral van for the last 25 years."

High School Dance

For a high school dance, the head boy asked out the girl he liked. To get flowers for her, he had to stand in a line outside the florist for an hour. To make things worse, he had to wait another hour in a line outside the tuxedo shop.

Finally, he goes to the dance with the girl. The girl wanted to have some apple punch so the boy went to get it, but to his surprise, there was no punch line.

THEME: Anatomy 101 ACROSS

1. Emir, alt. sp.

6. Comic book cry

9. *One of 27 in hand

13. Dhaka, formerly 14. Half man, half goat 15. Pressure ulcers, e.g.

16. Type of wrap

17. Old fashioned "before"

18. Do like ivy

19. *Smooth, skeletal or cardiac

21. *"Gray's ____"

23. Gardener's tool 24. Detected by olfactory system

25. Acronym-named sandwich

28. Sore throat voice

30. Retires from military service

35. Steak option

37. Place at angle

39. Double, in French

40. *Certain apple's namesake

41. Fork pokers 43. Heavy metal's Quiet ____ 44. *Pelvis bone

46. *Hardened keratin plate

47. Wedding promise?

48. Mandela

50. *Part of eye, not flower

52. Tokyo, formerly

53. Alpine transport

55. Cuckoo

57. *Vein to "go for"

61. *Cell body, axon and dendrite

64. Use the other side of pencil

65. Caviar alternative

67. Mafia's top dogs

69. "The best laid schemes o' mice an' men gang aft ____"

70. Fuss

71. Modern correspondence

72. Opposite of want

73. Japanese cur-

After a prolonged drought when the rain came, all the animals in the forest were happy except the Kangaroo. When the others asked him what the reason was for such sadness, the Kangaroo revealed that the rain meant that all its kids would now be playing inside.

PUNishment

I wanted to learn how to drive a stick shift, but I couldn’t find a manual.

This article is from: