Joint Tenancy Traps
Joint Tenancy is a common form of asset ownership.* If you own a bank account, brokerage account or perhaps real estate with one or more persons, then you and they may be Joint Tenants.
The full legal expression for this form of ownership is Joint Tenants with Rights of Survivorship (JTWROS).
Right of Survivorship
When one or more persons hold title to an asset as JTWROS, each of them owns the asset. When one Joint Tenant dies, the remaining Joint Tenants
continue to own the asset. Ultimately, the sole surviving Joint Tenant owns the entire asset. This Right of Survivorship is one of the attractive legal features of JTWROS.
Not surprisingly, many JTWROS relationships are between family members. It just seems like the natural thing to do and, especially between spouses in a long-term marriage, it
reflects the financial partnership of their commitment. Nevertheless, as with most things in life there are advantages and disadvantages to this form of asset ownership.
Advantages
When married couples acquire an asset together, the creation of JTWROS ownership between them is so common it should be called Joint Tendency.
If a Joint Tenant becomes incapacitated, probate may be avoided regarding any JTWROS assets. For example, the healthy spouse may continue to draw on the JTWROS bank account
without interference because of their concurrent ownership rights. For this reason many widows, widowers and other singles may add trusted family members or friends as Joint Tenants to
their assets.
Upon the death of a Joint Tenant, probate will be avoided as long as there is at least one surviving Joint Tenant. This may result in substantial savings in terms of
professional fees, court costs (and delays) and maintaining privacy. For these reasons some people add multiple family members, or even friends, as JTWROS on their assets to ensure the
likelihood of having at least one trustworthy survivor upon their death.
Disadvantages
Sometimes apparent legal simplicity may lead to unintended legal complexity. So it is with JTWROS. Before you decide to create or continue JTWROS
ownership, consider the following potential pitfalls.
JTWROS may avoid probate upon incapacity and even at death ... but only if there is at least one living Joint Tenant who also is not incapacitated. To ensure this, however,
most people add non-spouses as Joint Tenants. Whether it is children, siblings or friends, this can turn JTWROS into legal dynamite.
Once you add someone as a Joint Tenant to a given asset, they also own the given asset just as you do. What you may have intended merely as a convenience has instead subjected
the control, use and enjoyment of such asset to the potential liabilities of each Joint Tenant. These liabilities may come in many forms through your Joint Tenant, to include divorces,
lawsuits and creditors.
Your plans for the eventual distribution of your assets may be lost through JTWROS ownership. For example, Wills, Revocable Living Trusts and even Premarital Agreements do not
control assets held in JTWROS. Quite often assets passing to a surviving spouse later end up in JTWROS with a new spouse. That new spouse (and their children) ultimately may receive assets
from the previous marriage instead of the children for whom they were originally intended.
No discussion of JTWROS would be complete without mentioning its potential tax consequences. Depending on the total value of their estate, a married couple may unnecessarily
forfeit more than $1.4 million in federal estate tax savings by excessive JTWROS ownership. Certainly no one wants to make the IRS a major beneficiary of their life’s work.
* Note: While Joint Tenancy is most commonly found between married couples in common law states, residents of community property states also should understand it,
especially given the mobile nature of our society.
|