How does an executor resign?
If you’ve been named as an executor in someone’s Will but don’t want to act, here’s what you need to do.
If you’ve been named as an executor in someone’s Will but don’t want to act, here’s what you need to do.
Do you have more than one executor named in your estate planning documents? If you don’t, then you need to read on.
You are at the finish line – you are about to sign your Will. You have balanced the needs of your family, thought about your wealth distribution and your lawyer has drafted a protective and tax efficient Will. What could go wrong?
You may have heard of the concept of a family office and wondered what on earth it’s all about. If you have sought retail therapy at MYER, watched free to air television on the Seven network or treated yourself to some Paspaley pearls, then you have inadvertently been in the realm of a family office.
When it comes time to make an Estate Plan, most people have at least some idea who they want to give their wealth to. In many cases, they first want to give it to their partner, and then after their partner dies, they want to share it equally among their children. This is what we call the ‘standard’ or default choice.
For families with considerable wealth, there is one more ‘layer’ of planning you must consider. This is the scenario if one of your children dies, either before or after inheriting.
Once again, there tends to be a default in this scenario, that is, the children of your child (i.e. your grandchildren) will take their parent’s share. In this manner, the wealth passes down your ‘family’s bloodline‘.
This sounds simple and appropriate, but it does raise several critically important issues – that justify more thought.
A farm trust is a discretionary trust that is used to own land for primary production while also providing flexibility so the property can eventually be transferred to other family members. Asset protection, tax efficiencies, and ‘controlled succession planning’ are the key benefits of a farm trust.